In 1954, the Supreme Court essentially ended segregation in Brown v. Board of education and Southern politicians were outraged by it.
They responded by declaring a policy of "massive resistance" which led them to:
- pass laws that would remove state funding from any school that supported integration
- establish private schools that did not have to abide by the Supreme Court's ruling
- use public funds to fund children in these private schools
The Southern states came up with everything they could to limit the impact of the Supreme Court's decision but with time they were forced to accept it.
In conclusion, the Southern states found many creative ways to resist the Supreme Court outlawing segregation instead of just accepting it.
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They hoped the M.A.D or mutually assured destruction policy would prevent them from destroying each other. If either one was to attack the would both be destroyed.
Answer:
Islam
Explanation:
Islam was most popular religion in the commercial centers of West Africa and the Swahili city-states of East Africa. In the sixteenth century the trading city of Timbuktu had a prominent university for this religion.
The city of Timbuktu was a large commercial area and the Islamic language was instrumental in trade between cities in the region. This is what led to a vast propagation of the religion in the city.
The answer is obviously false