Plessy v. Ferguson | The Gilded Age (1865-1898) | US history | Khan Academy
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Plessy v. Ferguson was an 1896 Supreme Court case concerning whether "separate but equal" railway cars for black and white Americans violated the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. In this video, Kim Kutz Elliott discusses the case with scholars Jamal Greene and Earl Maltz. To learn more about US Government and Politics, visit Khan Academy at www.khanacademy.org/humanitie... To read more about constitutional law, visit the National Constitution Center’s website: constitutioncenter.org On this site, leading scholars interact and explore the Constitution and its history. For each provision of the Constitution, experts from different political perspectives coauthor interpretive explanations when they agree and write separately when their opinions diverge.
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Пікірлер: 37
Subscribed. I love history. I’ve learned so much from you.
Great information
Learning so much from these vids during this time of protests and CV19. Thank you. I hope to be more knowledgeable once I can go outside again :)
guys can you please make a video about the Proof of The Distributive Property for irrational and rational numbers please
Finally i made it here before the lancer fan club now i can post an original comment - Signed Lancer
where sal khan
Wow he's from New Orleans he looked European but was a mixture of European and African. They had me writing about Homer Plessy in High school
Eric Garner's case in N.Y. is not that much different than this Plessy case.
4:04 What does that even say? "soual"?
@dasianguyen9546
4 жыл бұрын
Social
@aegis5021
4 жыл бұрын
@@dasianguyen9546 Thanks!
Im lernding
How folks are aware this case was heard after passing Chief Justice John Marshall.
Hello
@poab_real
4 жыл бұрын
Please respond to my e-mails
It's true, I was plessy
Very informative but also kind boring
Plessy is from super mario 3d world
Booker T Washington father was white so he's not that much different than homer Plessy.
AND B;ACK PEOPLE OF TODAY ARE SO DESPERATLY ASKING GO BACK TO JIM CROW LAWS VERY VERY VERY RAPELY;
Louisiana is still very Racist. Back then if u looked black u would be lynched. So that's the state I'm from. It's very important to know who u are
Seems to me that the free market was starting to sort out the discrimination issue... until the government stepped in.
@Tundramonkey5
5 жыл бұрын
It was almost 100 years after plessy v. Ferguson that the government stepped in and made it so businesses couldnt keep discriminating, if the government didn't step in then we'd still have de facto segregation
@kennethalbert4653
5 жыл бұрын
@@Tundramonkey5: it was a privately owned railroad that put Homer up to it, paid for the lawyers etc. The GOVERNMENT ENFORCED the segregation laws.
@CHill-qn3kr
5 жыл бұрын
How so? What policies did the free market initiate ?
@kennethalbert4653
5 жыл бұрын
@@CHill-qn3kr "... Was starting to sort out...". My point was that Homer Plessy was recruited by the railroad to put himself in that position so that he could challenge the law. The railroads, being greedy capitalists (of course), didn't want the law, presumably because it cost them money... ie the free market, due to their profit motive, were aga st the discriminatory law. Free markets don't "initiate policy" they just work.
@Tundramonkey5
5 жыл бұрын
@@kennethalbert4653 only the railroads because they had business in north and south, but the majority of southern business like restaurants, hotels, gas stations would continue to segregate until the civil rights acts were passed
not very attention grabbing, very informative but boring
@tonyvision4137
2 жыл бұрын
History is like that sometimes