The correct cases and their results between Brown v. Board of Education and Plessy v. Ferguson were:
Brown v. Board of Education:
- Said segregation was NOT ALLOWED.
- This case OVERTURNED the precedent.
Plessy v. Ferguson:
- Coined the term "Separate but equal"
- Said that segregation (separation based on skin color) was ALLOWED.
<h3>How were Plessy v. Ferguson and Brown v. Board of Education different?</h3>
Plessy v. Ferguson was a case in the U.S. Supreme Court which affirmed that segregation based on skin color was allowed so long as both races were still treated equally.
Board of Education overturned the precedent and said that segregation by its very nature was not equal and so could not be allowed.
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The U.S did not join the League of Nations following WWI. Even the the President of the United States at that time, Woodrow Wilson, was enthusiastic about the organization, they didn't officially join it. The reason why they didn't join it was because of isolationists in congress, in other words, people that didn't agree with what other people are interested in. Because of the war and all of the fatal deaths of Americans, people didn't want the U.S to be affiliated with Europe in any way.
In 1870, the u.s. supreme court ruled in the cherokee tobacco case that
<span>These achievements refer to contributions of the "Persian Empire" but it should be noted that all of these civilizations have made contributes in these fields at some point. </span>