The correct answer is D) public schools designated for "whites only."
<em>The option that is an example of de jure discrimination is, public schools designated for "whites only."</em>
De jure segregation was a form of segregation for African Americans in the United States. This was race discrimination enforced by the law. Government laws in the Southern States allowed discrimination for black peole. For instance, laws that ordered public education, public schools only to be attended by white students. That is an example of de jure discrimination, a legal separation of groups based on race.
1. I choose the Emancipation proclamation.
The basis for a democratic country is the guarantee of human rights for all of its citizens and allowing all citizens the right to participate in the government.
Freeing other humans from slavery indicates his will to truly bring equality for all people int he nations, because he knew that slavery robbed the very essence of human rights from the people together with their dignity.
2. I compared it with Habeas Corpus
Habeas Corpus allow prisoners to report unlawful treatment when they're in their sentence. Indeed this represent Lincoln' willingness to preserve human rights, but the impact is nowhere near the Emancipation of Slavery that affect millions of human beings.
3. I belive Barrack Obama would be a good example.
Despite his blunder in adressing several economic issues in united states, General population believe that Obama always tried his best in perserving human rights and democracy. (could be seen by programs such as HAPA that give the right for children that born in united states by non-citizzens the right to be a legal citizen)
Henry Ford's car factories brought many jobs to the people of Michigan, it gave the working class a better quality of life and brought wealth to the state.
"Equality of rights was given to slaves"
Slavery ended in the United States in the spring of 1865, when the Confederate armies surrendered. All slaves of the Confederation were freed by the Proclamation of Emancipation, which stipulated that the slaves of all the states that had split off from the Union would be free from that moment. The slaves of the border states and those of the parts of the South that were in the hands of the United States were released in December of that same year thanks to the Thirteenth Amendment. From this moment on, slaves were given equal rights, although they were not reflected at that precise moment if the foundations were laid for this to happen in the future.