Critical Review Justice "Survey" "Simple Justice" was written by Richard Kruger and reviewed the history of Brown v. Board of Education, the Supreme Court's decision to ban apartheid, and the pre-century legal equality struggle in Africa and the United States did. It begins with unfairness of slavery, the integration of schools into society, and the legal basis affecting African Americans. This story reveals that hatred has resulted in depreciation of American African Americans over 300 years.
It does not deny Brown's contribution to ending the evil system of American legal isolation and racial oppression. Richard Kruger, author of Simple Justice, points out as follows. "The Supreme Court tried to limit the words of Brown to the isolation of public schools." Until 1954, the doctrine of "separation but equality" that was included in the case of Pressy v. Ferguson defined domestic norms. In the south, racial oppression is cruel, endorsed by the legal system and can be traced back to our country's slave era. In the north, de facto separation and secret discrimination are common. Blacks should stay in their "place" everywhere.
Briefly, Richard Kruger wrote on the day before Brown v. Board of Education, "Black people do not yet know their rights yet." People make better in economics and education - so in the white community they become fickle, do not run the risk of monetary revenge or run the risk of violence. (3) The situation in Gadsden County is different. Linda and Jewell Dixie's father Dixie are a good example. A.I. Dixie was a day worker at the Gadsden County Tobacco Plantation in the 1930s but tried to organize colleagues to face cruel working conditions. When this effort collapsed in 1936, he carried out armed self-defense to prevent the white coach from whipping him. (Four)
Garnet talked to more and more African Americans. The universal desire for simple justice and human revenge calls for brutal revenge for slave owner's abuse. Nevertheless, care should be taken with caution. However, "legitimate" aggressive manhood seems to be attractive, "Most black people understand the danger of relatively helpless slavery and the consequences of slave rebellion", that is, white people's Large-scale retaliation. He asserts a good battle, but "It does not encourage revolution, your number is too small." 23 He led foolishness trying to free blacks by all means to their bold slaughter It was.