Why did Southern states pass segregation laws to prevent contact between whites and African Americans? Southerners believed cont
act would suggest equality. Southerners wanted to comply with the federal government. Southerners thought contact might lead to violence. Southerners believed in “separate but equal” treatment.
Southern Democrats didn't like white southern Republicans. They referred to them as scalawags, or greedy rascals. Democrats believed that these southerners had betrayed the South by voting for the Republican Party
The correct answer is A) Southerners believed contact would suggest equality.
<em>Southern states passed segregation laws to prevent contact between whites and African Americans because Southerners believed contact would suggest equality.</em>
People in the Southern states favored slavery. They passed laws that supported segregation and prohibit contact between white people and black people. This was very criticized by people in the Union states of the North. Southern people based part of their economy on slavery and for them it was normal and part of its life. African American people suffered many limitations and were considered property in the Southern states. Separatism and slavery were reasons that initiated the Civil War.
They had collapsed after al-mansur had sent an army to attack them and gain trade route access. When they were defeated in the Battle of Tondibi they had soon collapsed. Plus they had a recent civil war, so they were weakened.