Lol I had 3 months to wrote a 4 paged essay about this case, I’ve read multiple sites and articles about this case and couldn’t really understand what’s going on. My essay is due tomorrow and watching this really helped me understand and write my essay. Thank you so much🤝
Great video for the first 3:25. After that, it attempts to give a happy ending, as if Brown vs Board and the Civil Rights Act solved systemic racism. The video completely brushed over the systematic racism and brutality that defined the Civil Rights era. We've effectively created a separate society today by allowing schools to be funded by property taxes and having a welfare system that effectively traps people in poverty.
Great video thanks so much! I have my interview for Cambridge law tomorrow and so trying to refresh my mind on some important cases. This was super helpful!!
I'm nobody doing homework but I think it should be noted that some colleges are segregated again. Separate dorm buildings, separate lessons for different ethnicities, and separate graduation ceremonies. Segregation is coming back, and fast. The "social justice warriors" or "woke" people are asking for it. Why?...
I was accepted to Harvard, Princeton, Penn State, Temple University, Florida A &M, John'son C. Smith, and CCP on full scholarship initially, can't quite remember whether I was accepted to any others 37 or 38 years ago, but have also paid tuition and won subsequent scholarships since then. 03-02-2024
I strongly disagree with the "there were no differences between the quality of the two schools" Mr. Marshall was correct to say there was definitely inequalities between the two schools. Can you guess which school was inadequate??
Do you have evidence, or is this just your feeling? It's not impossible that the black elementary school in Topeka could have been equal to the white elementary school in terms of facilities and teacher quality. The video properly made the point that the argument of schools being "equal" or not was less important than the argument of racial segregation itself. To focus on the issue of whether the black school was as good as the white school is to accept the fundamentally flawed logic of the Plessy v. Ferguson decision.
Good work. I have only one quibble. There wasn't just one "Civil Rights Act"--there were three after the Brown v. Board decision. During the Eisenhower administration, there was the 1954 Civil RIghts Act, the first such law passed since Reconstruction, and the 1960 Civil RIghts Act, which closed some loopholes and extended some provisions in the 1957 law. Both were weakened by Democrat opposition in the Senate. THEN came the 1964 Civil RIghts Act, which was much stronger. But it's not right to think that it was the only, or even the first, such action.
You do a disservice by making it seem as if cities just started ending segregation voluntarily after the Supreme Court's ruling. Most municipalities ignored the ruling until the government started withholding federal funds. Only then would cities follow the law. In many states in the Southeast, cities didn't stop segregating schools until the 1970's.
Posting for AW one of my students: I am a student at a middle school in Cincinnati, Ohio. I would like to use your video for a project I am working on for my class. The project will require me to download and possibly edit out portions of your video. This project will be on a password restricted site so my work will only be published for my fellow classmates to see. Please respond to my reply to accept or deny my request.
I just watched a video that stated that the Supreme Court rarely resolves an issue between two parties, well I like to suggest that the Supreme Court has a pecuniary interest in not having a plenary interest which puts a for sale sign on Justice. The segregation has an unacknowledged party that is drowned out by racial issues and misses the financial separation of powers that is based upon financial equity. It is incumbent upon Congress to maintain equity through commerce to ensure equal access to the law for the poor against the wealthy, being poor touches every race and it is not discriminative. However, being rich in the United States of America promotes Greed, unfaithfulness, theft, murder, lying, cheating, stealing, and every other moral law. This is why moral law has the greater power to lift a nation up or to remove it from the face of the earth. Immorality is how a country is destroyed from within, and capitalism Vs. Socialism is the art of the deal from keeping a country United and strong. What made the United States of America that shining light on the hill was its morality and its ability to maintain Truth Justice and equity, that is what plagues our nation today, and is what will will destroy us if the wealthy do not pay their fair share of taxation. We would not have such a large deficit if the elite had paid back what they owe to we the people signed E. Pluribus Unum..
Hi! At 0:59 you mention several different cases lead to the action of Brown vs. Board. What are the names of these cases? Researching for a project and I'm not positive but does this include the Briggs v. Elliot, Davis v. Board of Education of Prince Edward County (VA.), Boiling v. Sharpe, or the Gebhart v. Ethel cases?
Hi! Another case that is not nationally known (but played an important factor in Board vs Brown) was the Mendez vs Westminster case. It was about a family challenging their school district on the unconstitutional segregation between Mexican-Americans and Americans. The same pieces of evidence (social science) were used in the Brown vs Board case, leading to its success. I know that your comment was posted a year ago; but the Mendez case played a significant role and set the stage in the Brown vs Board!! Forgot to add that the Mendez case took place in California !!
I'm really confused can someone help me? I don't understand how to answer the question of how did it happen? How did the Brown Vs the Board Of Education
Sorry, Keon, I would like to help but not sure I understand your question. How did what happen? Please review the video again, and let me know which section(s) are unclear.
This is BS.. This dude must be like 23 telling this BS..He never lived thru segregation, it was not a pretty picture...Do your research to really find out what happened during segregation.
@@joeymann1625 It's called De Facto Segregation. "For example, often the concentration of African-Americans in certain neighborhoods produces neighborhood schools that are predominantly black, or segregated in fact (de facto), although not by law (de jure). (Dictionary.com)" It's not mentioned, but in many public schools, it's predominantly hispanic or of another minority. Which is why integration of schools is still being fought for to this very day. Don't worry, I was not aware of how big segregation still is until last year :((
@@arellys.h2699 segregation is the enforced separation of a thing to another in this case the people of the predominant ethnicity are usually born and adopt the house of their parents plus we all agree that enforced segregation is terrible but I do not see the problem schools nowadays are all around the same quality. Even the Topeka schools in the video were around the same quality and this is when enforced segregation is in full effect, the concept of defacto segregation is a way the left tries to oppress themselves
@Joey Mann although I see your perspective, it does not always have to be enforced segregation for it to be considered segregation. Even though back then segregated schools might have had the same resources as of another school, it was still segregated due to race , ethnicity, or origin. As one judge stated “seperate is never equal.” (Supported of course by the 14th amendment ). Although segregation in today’s time isn’t as racially enforced as back then, it’s segregated more than ever; because of the lack of diversity found in many public schools.
Quarantine homework gang where you at
yes
Floor gang ough
Yuh
you look like me
here
right here right rhere!
I am stuck in social distancing and my ELA teacher sent this to us, to help with an assignment. This made it a lot easier. Thank you!
im confused How did this decision use ideas from the 14th Amendment?
Same
Sunshine Space me to
I have a final exam tomorrow in my History Lecture Hall and I missed the day my professor covered this topic. Thanks so much!
You are very welcome! That is what we are here for.
What score did you get
@@meganhey2582
Probably 100%. As he learned from here that all you have to do is bring down yt and put up blke.
So, Why are liberals bringing segregation back to schools?
@@coda821 they arent.
I feel like im playing the sims 4 with this background music
HAHA
I said that too hahaha
just get a life bro
America certainly has come a long way. 👏👏👏
I was working on a project and stumbled upon this. THIS HAS BEEN A LIFE SAVER! THANKS!!!
Bros really out here saving lives, thanks so much bru!
man all those dislikes yall really failed your tests
can we all agree that the music is fire?
Ah yes, they must have used "dang it" while protesting against this case. Good video though.
Lol I had 3 months to wrote a 4 paged essay about this case, I’ve read multiple sites and articles about this case and couldn’t really understand what’s going on. My essay is due tomorrow and watching this really helped me understand and write my essay. Thank you so much🤝
Good job! Extremely well made. Music matches the story perfectly.
Thank you MillieVanillie.
ur gæ
@@BillofRightsInstituteVideos what is the name of the music used in the video?
Great video for the first 3:25. After that, it attempts to give a happy ending, as if Brown vs Board and the Civil Rights Act solved systemic racism. The video completely brushed over the systematic racism and brutality that defined the Civil Rights era. We've effectively created a separate society today by allowing schools to be funded by property taxes and having a welfare system that effectively traps people in poverty.
This is the bill of rights institute, as an org started by billionaires, its supposed to pretend everything is fine
thought i was the only one who caught that tiptoe back into kumbaya lies.
That's felt by people of all races. That is not proof of systemic racism
Thank you for sharing this video. Excellent !!
Thank you my teacher didn't touch on this subject very much he Mostly just focused on emmet till and Rosa parks
You are very welcome!
Thank you really much!
I'm a student from germany and have to do a presentation about this. Your video really helped
Great video thanks so much! I have my interview for Cambridge law tomorrow and so trying to refresh my mind on some important cases. This was super helpful!!
Thank you we are doing this wax museum and my person is linda brown
I'm nobody doing homework but I think it should be noted that some colleges are segregated again. Separate dorm buildings, separate lessons for different ethnicities, and separate graduation ceremonies.
Segregation is coming back, and fast. The "social justice warriors" or "woke" people are asking for it.
Why?...
Exactly!
divide and conquer
This video felt powerful. Excellent Job!
I was accepted to Harvard, Princeton, Penn State, Temple University, Florida A &M, John'son C. Smith, and CCP on full scholarship initially, can't quite remember whether I was accepted to any others 37 or 38 years ago, but have also paid tuition and won subsequent scholarships since then. 03-02-2024
Thank you, Thank you, Thank you!! This helped me very much on my test!
You're welcome! So glad we were able to help.
Now the woke crowd is saying only black teachers can effectively teach black kids, and giving us segregated dormitories, study spaces, etc.
I strongly disagree with the "there were no differences between the quality of the two schools" Mr. Marshall was correct to say there was definitely inequalities between the two schools. Can you guess which school was inadequate??
Yeah I'm suspicious of the intention behind putting that line in
Do you have evidence, or is this just your feeling? It's not impossible that the black elementary school in Topeka could have been equal to the white elementary school in terms of facilities and teacher quality. The video properly made the point that the argument of schools being "equal" or not was less important than the argument of racial segregation itself. To focus on the issue of whether the black school was as good as the white school is to accept the fundamentally flawed logic of the Plessy v. Ferguson decision.
Very well done! Thank you so much!
BOARD OF EDUCATION VS BROWN I WAS BORED OF EDUCATION LEFT FOR TOWN
Incoherent and overuse of the caps lock
Allow students to escape horrible inner city public schools with vouchers. Who is opposing this ?
we got distracted to easily :/
Good work. I have only one quibble. There wasn't just one "Civil Rights Act"--there were three after the Brown v. Board decision. During the Eisenhower administration, there was the 1954 Civil RIghts Act, the first such law passed since Reconstruction, and the 1960 Civil RIghts Act, which closed some loopholes and extended some provisions in the 1957 law. Both were weakened by Democrat opposition in the Senate. THEN came the 1964 Civil RIghts Act, which was much stronger. But it's not right to think that it was the only, or even the first, such action.
And now we have gone full circle, Columbia U is having segregated graduation ceremonies... and that’s just the start... smh...
Thank you
You do a disservice by making it seem as if cities just started ending segregation voluntarily after the Supreme Court's ruling. Most municipalities ignored the ruling until the government started withholding federal funds. Only then would cities follow the law. In many states in the Southeast, cities didn't stop segregating schools until the 1970's.
Great video! helped me write an essay about ELLs' court cases.
whats the name of the music track? I want to use it for a video
thanks homeboy, gonna use ur vid in my presentation in ap gov tomorrow. shoutout to the real ones making these vids, inspiring generations and shit.
Get naed naed
Very well done
This was awesome! You don’t know how much this helped me with my school paper!
So glad we could help!
Supreme Court Briefs!
They weren’t arguing segregation they were arguing equal funding
Thank you so much your videos helped me big time on my project!!
Brenda, we are glad to know that it helped!
hey
this was actually really helpful! thanks
Beautifully explained 👏👍Love from India❤️🇮🇳
SCHOOL CHOICE - Let our tax dollars follow the student fortifying EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY.
AMERICAN FREEDOM
Excellent explanation. Well done!
What software did your group use to create the visuals in this video?
Adobe Creative Suite!
Thank you! Was it Adobe Creative Cloud: Illustrator?
Posting for AW one of my students: I am a student at a middle school in Cincinnati, Ohio. I would like to use your video for a project I am working on for my class. The project will require me to download and possibly edit out portions of your video. This project will be on a password restricted site so my work will only be published for my fellow classmates to see. Please respond to my reply to accept or deny my request.
Thanks so much
Great video, helped me with my project. :D Thank You
Did Brown vs BD of ED guarantee a free education , or a fair and equitable one ?
Who else has a Government case briefing?
I just watched a video that stated that the Supreme Court rarely resolves an issue between two parties, well I like to suggest that the Supreme Court has a pecuniary interest in not having a plenary interest which puts a for sale sign on Justice. The segregation has an unacknowledged party that is drowned out by racial issues and misses the financial separation of powers that is based upon financial equity. It is incumbent upon Congress to maintain equity through commerce to ensure equal access to the law for the poor against the wealthy, being poor touches every race and it is not discriminative. However, being rich in the United States of America promotes Greed, unfaithfulness, theft, murder, lying, cheating, stealing, and every other moral law. This is why moral law has the greater power to lift a nation up or to remove it from the face of the earth. Immorality is how a country is destroyed from within, and capitalism Vs. Socialism is the art of the deal from keeping a country United and strong. What made the United States of America that shining light on the hill was its morality and its ability to maintain Truth Justice and equity, that is what plagues our nation today, and is what will will destroy us if the wealthy do not pay their fair share of taxation. We would not have such a large deficit if the elite had paid back what they owe to we the people signed E. Pluribus Unum..
I’d rather be watching Minecraft Manhunt
Simp
Ok GeorgeNotFound simp
then go watch it mate
Revising for my final year exams cause my history teacher suckssss
Can Penal Code Rehabilitation use this case cite in Civil Rights Litigation?????
Why did it happen? And How did it happen?
Who else putting together a civil rights timeline not knowing shit about what brown vs board of education was
What was the final vote though?
It was unanimous.
@@BillofRightsInstituteVideos Thanks!
thank you so much you made my project alot easier
Hi! At 0:59 you mention several different cases lead to the action of Brown vs. Board. What are the names of these cases? Researching for a project and I'm not positive but does this include the Briggs v. Elliot, Davis v. Board of Education of Prince Edward County (VA.), Boiling v. Sharpe, or the Gebhart v. Ethel cases?
The other were as follows: Briggs v. Elliot, Davis v. Board of Education of Prince Edward County (VA.), Boiling v. Sharpe, and Gebhart v. Ethel.
Hi! Another case that is not nationally known (but played an important factor in Board vs Brown) was the Mendez vs Westminster case. It was about a family challenging their school district on the unconstitutional segregation between Mexican-Americans and Americans. The same pieces of evidence (social science) were used in the Brown vs Board case, leading to its success. I know that your comment was posted a year ago; but the Mendez case played a significant role and set the stage in the Brown vs Board!!
Forgot to add that the Mendez case took place in California !!
Wow superb explanation
Equal protection under law
my teacher made an assignment out of your video, an awesome video though
And then, Little Nine Crisis.
This decision was only the possible.
I'm really confused can someone help me? I don't understand how to answer the question of how did it happen? How did the Brown Vs the Board Of Education
Sorry, Keon, I would like to help but not sure I understand your question. How did what happen? Please review the video again, and let me know which section(s) are unclear.
The background music is distracting! 😮💨
Yo can someone write me a reaction of the "separate but not equal" ;)
Hi um no thx
Separate was never equal, not in the USA.
thank u
wait ..what’s the song?
The captions are so off🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️
The Narrator sounds like a young Bill Clinton.
anyone else down bad (;
I write Supreme Court themed punk rock and I wrote a song that explains this case. The music video is on my channel.
i HAVE TO DO THIS FOR MY BLIZZARD BAG
Who came here form scott the woz
I’m cheating😻
ahhh very good
Thank you! We are glad you like it!
np
Great video! Really links with George floyd and everything which is happening at the minute!
This is BS.. This dude must be like 23 telling this BS..He never lived thru segregation, it was not a pretty picture...Do your research to really find out what happened during segregation.
'blaacks' um sure
I like this video 6:11 this is Dhoni
BS. There is more segregation now than before Brown v. Board of Education. The disparities are insane and the gaps keep getting bigger.
How?
@@joeymann1625 It's called De Facto Segregation. "For example, often the concentration of African-Americans in certain neighborhoods produces neighborhood schools that are predominantly black, or segregated in fact (de facto), although not by law (de jure). (Dictionary.com)" It's not mentioned, but in many public schools, it's predominantly hispanic or of another minority. Which is why integration of schools is still being fought for to this very day. Don't worry, I was not aware of how big segregation still is until last year :((
@@arellys.h2699 segregation is the enforced separation of a thing to another in this case the people of the predominant ethnicity are usually born and adopt the house of their parents plus we all agree that enforced segregation is terrible but I do not see the problem schools nowadays are all around the same quality. Even the Topeka schools in the video were around the same quality and this is when enforced segregation is in full effect, the concept of defacto segregation is a way the left tries to oppress themselves
@Joey Mann although I see your perspective, it does not always have to be enforced segregation for it to be considered segregation. Even though back then segregated schools might have had the same resources as of another school, it was still segregated due to race , ethnicity, or origin. As one judge stated “seperate is never equal.” (Supported of course by the 14th amendment ). Although segregation in today’s time isn’t as racially enforced as back then, it’s segregated more than ever; because of the lack of diversity found in many public schools.
@@arellys.h2699 segregation of the schools now is not racially enforced I dont see the problem
sb summary dis foe me .
Now we. MSM NAACP Celibrate Segregated college and H.S. Gradations....hmmmmmm
1st one to comment in 2 years 🫡
2nd
hey
(Insert meme here) Nice