Download Delaying the Dream: Southern Senators and the Fight Against Civil Rights, 1938-1965 AudioBook Free
Few historical occasions lend themselves to such a sharp delineation between right and wrong as does indeed the civil protection under the law have difficulty. In Delaying the Wish, Keith M. Finley, explores gradations in the opposition, by examining how the region's principal national spokesmen - its United States senators - tackled themselves to the civil protection under the law question, and developed a concerted plan of action to thwart legislation: the use of strategic wait. Ahead of World Conflict II, Finley explains, southern senators identified nov segregation as inevitable, and consciously evolved their practices to delay, alternatively than prevent defeat, enabling those to frustrate civil protection under the law advances for decades. As public support for civil protection under the law grew, southern senators altered their arguments to limit the use of overt racism and charm to northerners. They awarded small concessions on bills only tangentially related to civil protection under the law, while emasculating people that have more substantive procedures. They garnered support by nationalizing their protection of sectional passions, and associated their protection of segregation with constitutional concepts to curry favour with non-southern politicians. As the senators achieved success at the federal government level, Finley shows, they failed to test local racial agitators in the South, allowing extremism to flourish.