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Monica [59]
3 years ago
10

When Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered his “four freedom “ speech , who was his intended audience and what was his purpose?

History
1 answer:
lukranit [14]3 years ago
5 0

Citizens and 77th Congresspeople was his audience. Purposes: To prepare the public for war, to warn about international challenges, to inform people about the policy of the international organization, also US government has the responsibility of protecting democracies worldwide, to convince the people to support British and Europe by entering WWII and to expand the idea of freedom and liberty.

<u>Explanation:</u>

Franklin D Roosevelt was an American President making 77th congress in the US in the year 1940. In 1941 he made a speech about Freedom that is popularly called 4 Freedom Speech. He was fought for universal freedoms since he considered that it was just for everyone.

He spoke about how the US will work with the British to defend 4 Freedoms. They are Freedom for Worship, Freedom for Speech, Freedom From Fear and Freedom from Want. Also, he stated the ways to fight totalitarianism.

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In September 1895, Booker T. Washington, the head of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, stepped to the podium at the Atlanta Cotton States Exposition and implored white employers to “cast down your bucket where you are” and hire African Americans who had proven their loyalty even throughout the South’s darkest hours. In return, Washington declared, southerners would be able to enjoy the fruits of a docile work force that would not agitate for full civil rights. Instead, blacks would be “In all things that are purely social . . . as separate as the fingers.”

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Regardless of which strategy one selected, it was clear that the stakes were extremely high. In the thirty years since the Civil War ended African Americans had experienced startling changes to their life opportunities. Emancipation was celebrated, of course, but that was followed by an intense debate about the terms of black freedom: who could buy or sell property, get married, own firearms, vote, set the terms of employment, receive an education, travel freely, etc. Just as quickly as real opportunities seemed to appear with the arrival of Reconstruction, when black men secured unprecedented political rights in the South, they were gone when northern armies left in 1877 and the era of Redemption began. These were the years when white Southerners returned to political and economic power, vowing to “redeem” themselves and the South they felt had been lost. Part of the logic of Redemption revolved around controlling black bodies and black social, economic, and political opportunities. Much of this control took the form of so-called Jim Crow laws—a wide-ranging set of local and state statutes that, collectively, declared that the races must be segregated.

In 1896, the year after Washington’s Atlanta Cotton Exposition speech, the Supreme Court declared in Plessy v. Ferguson that racial segregation was constitutional. It would take fifty-eight years for that decision to be reversed (in Brown v. Board of Education). In the meantime, African Americans had to negotiate the terms of their existence through political agitation, group organizing, cultural celebration, and small acts of resistance. Much of this negotiation can be seen in the history of the Great Migration, that period when blacks began to move, generally speaking, from the rural South to the urban North. In the process, African Americans changed the terms upon which they exercised their claims to citizenship and rights as citizens.

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