"We cannot have the assumption that people of color can find their way in this society only by aligning themselves with a white group or white power structure... We must establish our own identity, our own organizations, and our own power bases, rather than attempting to integrate into a system that has systematically excluded us."
— Stokely Carmichael, address at the University of California, Berkeley, 1966
Which of the following developments in the mid-to-late 1960s best explains the perspective expressed in the excerpt?
- AThe universal adoption of Black Power philosophy by all major civil rights organizations as the sole path forward.
- BThe implementation of New Deal social programs that successfully integrated urban communities and ended economic disparities.
- Growing disillusionment among younger activists with the limitations of federal civil rights legislation and ongoing systemic discrimination.Cevap
- DA consensus among activists to abandon political lobbying in Washington in favor of creating a separate nation-state.
Cevap
Growing disillusionment among younger activists with the limitations of federal civil rights legislation and ongoing systemic discrimination.
The perspective in the excerpt is best explained by the growing disillusionment among younger activists with the limitations of federal civil rights legislation and ongoing systemic discrimination. Despite the passage of major laws like the Civil Rights Act of 1964, many African Americans continued to face intense economic deprivation, residential segregation, and police brutality, especially in northern and western cities. This led activists within groups like the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) to reject the integrationist approach in favor of self-determination and self-defense.
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The Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s
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