Independent Analysis
Document
The historical context of this document (a verbatim transcript of governor Ross Barnett) perfectly reflects the resistance that southern states put up in order to avoid integrating schools -- in this case, the University of Mississippi -- because Jim Crow laws were still in effect in southern states like Mississippi and Alabama. The earlier context to this document is the iconic Supreme Court case, Brown vs. Board of Education, which officially meant that all schools should be integrated and that segregation in education ("separate but equal") was unconstitutional. However, southern states ignored this Supreme Court decision and kept schools segregated because racism against African-Americans was part of the culture and the beginning of the Civil Rights Movement did not change the minds of bigoted politicians. Black folks were considered to be less worthy than white folks in many places and in many instances.
Content -- Document
There are several major points being made in this document, among them: a) the federal government has overstepped its authority in demanding that Mississippi open its doors to people of all ethnicities; b) the U.S. Constitution says that the power that is not given to the U.S. should be assumed by the states, and therefore the state of Mississippi has the power do decide who shall attend universities and who should not; c) states rights trump any federal laws and states have the right to resist the federal government because they have the right of self-determination; and d) those who are pushing for integration through protests are nothing but "professional agitators" and "paid propagandists."
This source, Governor Ross Barnett is arguing that his state doesn't have to abide by federal law...
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One of the major components of these Jim Crow laws was disenfranchisement which was "largely the work of rural and urban white elites who sought to reassure" whites in the south that white supremacy was the law of the land. As a result, lynching and other forms of violence against blacks were endorsed, encouraged and rationalized in the minds of most southern whites (Rabinowitz, 168). A prominent spokesman against African-American
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When he became president through the assassination of President Kennedy, he not only accepted the civil rights agenda of President Kennedy but he was successful in passing pivotal legislation. Through shrewd deal making and lobbying of senators he was able to get a bill passed which prohibited segregation in places involved in interstate commerce. The following year when attempts were made to restore voting rights to blacks in the south
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