The Supreme Court felt that the "separate but equal" doctrine didn't violate the 14th Amendment because they believed that both blacks and whites were being treated equally despite being separate. The 14th Amendment gave American citizenship to all African Americans, this included former slaves. This means that the government must give all American citizens the same rights, equal protection, and due process.
The Brown v. Board of Education case proved that the "separate but equal" doctrine was false. This was where a young African American girl had to walk a long way to her black school, while there was a white school very close to her home. This was an obvious problem and proved that "separate but equal" was not equal at all. Eventually, this case ended segregation in public schools. The Plessy v. Ferguson case also proved this, but the Supreme Court tried to justify the "separate but equal" doctrine by saying how blacks and whites have the same equal facilities.
Answer:
Conduct International Negotiations: As chief diplomat, the President of the United States can negotiate agreements and treaties with other countries, which must also be ratified by the U.S. Senate.
Explanation:
Conduct International Negotiations: As chief diplomat, the President of the United States can negotiate agreements and treaties with other countries, which must also be ratified by the U.S. Senate.
Alexander the Great (356-323 BCE) of Macedon first follwed in his father’s (King Phillip II) footsteps in subduing the city-states
of Greece and then lead his army on a series of campaigns which
successfully conquered the then-known world from Macedon, through
Greece, down to Egypt, across Persia, to India. Alexander’s tutor was the Greek philosopher Aristotle
(384-322 BCE) and, as Alexander traveled, he spread Greek thought and
culture in his wake, thus "hellenizing" (to make `Greek’ in culture and
civilizaion) those he conquered.
After Alexander’s death his Empire was divided among his four generals - the Diadochi or Successors.
Answer:
Many people were racist in the 1950s. For example, you have white friends if you are white and black friends if you were black. No segregation or mixing at all. Different restuarnts, water fountains, bathrooms, schools and anything else you can think of basically! They also did lots of peace "riots" marching and holding signs, Martin Luther King Jr. participated in many of the peace walks with many other blacks. I dont know about Linda brown but Rosa Parks was sitting on a bus and got asked to move so a white person could sit where she was sitting and she said no. She eventually got aressted and some blacks decided not to ride the bus anymore because of that and they wouldnt ride the bus again until she was released. (I dont know if any whites did the same thing and didnt ride the bus, probably a few) She got released and changed the world and impacted many!