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AP U.S. History 2.2 Period 8: 1945–1980 200 Views
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AP U.S. History 2.2 Period 8: 1945–1980. The intent behind the Supreme Court's decision was primarily bolstered by what other developments in the 1940s, 50s, and 60s?
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:03
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by judicial intent,
- 00:08
the Supreme Court's annual camping trip.
- 00:11
All right, check out this excerpt.
- 00:13
[ mumbles ]
Full Transcript
- 00:16
[ mumbling continues ] All right.
- 00:19
And the question:
- 00:20
The intent behind the Supreme Court's decision
- 00:23
was primarily bolstered
- 00:25
by what other developments in the 1940s, 50s, and 60s?
- 00:29
And here are your potential answers. [ mumbles ]
- 00:32
[ mumbling continues ] Hmm.
- 00:36
All right. Well, we know that Brown v. Board of Education
- 00:38
made the case against segregation in schools, but
- 00:42
what else could've been behind it?
- 00:43
Well, you know, other than it being the 100% right thing to do.
- 00:47
So let's see which answer makes those intentions clear.
- 00:50
Was the intent behind the Supreme Court's decision bolstered
- 00:53
by A - increased support for civil rights in the South?
- 00:58
Oh, man. Not in the least.
- 00:59
Not only did the South not support civil rights,
- 01:02
it actively worked against them.
- 01:03
George Wallace, the governor of Alabama,
- 01:06
gave a speech on his inauguration day that declared,
- 01:09
"segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever."
- 01:14
Tell us how you really feel, George.
- 01:15
Actually, don't bother.
- 01:17
Did the Supreme Court's decision emerge from
- 01:19
C - a more unified philosophical and tactical agenda
- 01:22
among civil rights activists?
- 01:24
Well, actually, faced with the aggressive bigotry by
- 01:27
people like Mr. Wallace here, civil rights activists
- 01:30
began to disagree over the best tactical
- 01:33
course to pursue in their fight to end discrimination.
- 01:36
C would have been great, but it wasn't in the cards.
- 01:39
Could the Supreme Court's judicial action have resulted from D -
- 01:42
economic gains made by African Americans?
- 01:44
Well, unfortunately, economic gains by African Americans
- 01:46
did little to end formal segregation,
- 01:48
since the racial and cultural prejudice against them
- 01:51
stretched back centuries.
- 01:53
Kind of hard to reason with hate and ignorance.
- 01:56
So it's not D, either.
- 01:57
Which means that the intent behind the Supreme Court's decision
- 02:00
was primarily bolstered by B -
- 02:03
executive and legislative measures
- 02:06
aimed at ending racial discrimination.
- 02:09
Civil rights activists weren't only fighting in the courts.
- 02:11
They also pressured the executive and legal branches
- 02:14
to take action against discrimination. And take action they did.
- 02:18
In 1948, President Truman issued Executive
- 02:20
Order 9981, abolishing racial discrimination in the military.
- 02:25
And in 1964, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act,
- 02:29
which prohibited discrimination based on race,
- 02:31
ended unequal voting registration practices,
- 02:34
and stopped segregation in schools and public workplaces.
- 02:38
So B is the correct answer. This triad of judicial decisions,
- 02:42
executive orders, and legislation
- 02:45
all aimed to end formal racial discrimination.
- 02:48
Well, maybe the best things really do come in threes.
- 02:52
[ thump ] [ yelp ]
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