In the 1950s, America was on the verge of explosion. Of course it is not literally, but in a sense it is positive. Slavery has been abolished for centuries, but American African Americans are still considered second-class citizens. As described in 1896's Pressy and Ferguson's revolutionary case, they are separate, but equivalent, and are standard dogmas of American law. This is a failure for many blacks because these facilities are clearly inequality as well as restoring south white dominance.
In 1954, a case known as Brown and the Board of Education, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that apartheid at a public school is unconstitutional. Many Caucasians in the south believe that abolishing school separation lowers school standards and does not evaluate them. When the US fights overseas with communists, the battle for civil rights peaks in China.
Brown and the Board of Education and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 were important milestones of the civil rights movement, but they did not exclude apartheid and did not eliminate the need to talk about race in today's culture. The civil rights law itself is a law that permits misuse to be abused and it is not an act of ending a continuous battle with civil rights. Brown and the Board of Education prohibited separation at public schools, but it proved difficult to fight with apartheid. Today, school has isolation, but it exists in various ways.
This is what happens in cities all over the world. In the relationship between Brown and the Board of Education, our school education, determined by isolated countries, infringed the constitutional rights of black children. We promise to solve this problem. As we know, when things proved to be difficult, we say integration fails rather than truth, and that is how it works. But we do not think that it deserves trouble. "When I think of both, my neighbor seems to be telegraphic, drug trafficking, police brutality, murder, there is almost perfect match for us, a universal commentary on that white man I admire the eternal love of you.