Answer: The Vietnam War divided the civil rights movement and African-Americans more than any other event in American history, exacerbating pre-existing rifts in the civil rights coalition, and it diverted attention away from the struggle for racial justice and toward opposition to the war,” argues Daniel Lucks, author of “Selma to Saigon: The Civil Rights Movement and the Vietnam War,” published in March. “All these factors had profound and tragic consequences for the civil rights movement and for black America.”
The Constitution of the United States of America is federal legislation, meaning that it applies to the entire nation of United States (all states) and all of the people in the country.
<span>The Constitution of the United State of Arizona is state legislation that applies to the people in that state, visitors, and citizens of that state that are out of the borders of that state. In other words, it does not apply to anyone who does not live in Arizona and does not subsequently hold citizenship in that state (i.e. does not have a driver's license there).
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The Arizona Constitution is state legislation and the US Constitution is national legislation. Sometimes legislation differs from state to state.
The states still had the freedom to create their own laws and have their own constitutions (as long as they don't go against by the Constitution). The states have reserved powers.
The rights of the individuals are respected mainly by being listed in the constitution's first ten amendments, or Bill of Rights.