The 1960s was a decade that was successful but yet impacted the world in a negative way, but also led to many setbacks we still have going on today. The 1960’s was the height of the Vietnam War and a time when equality did not exist for all. There was the women's rights movement that was inspired by the Civil Rights Act. There were protests and movements for equality throughout the United States. Whether it was with women being treated unfairly or unequally or African Americans being called ‘animals’. There were many activists that acted against this discrimination, namely Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X. Malcolm X philosophy made the most sense for Americans in the 1960's because he was more realistic and in the moment about his ideology. In all of Malcolm X's speeches he was …show more content…
He states that the whites will still be respected and given credit. Blacks must work with each other to show that a black man can be independent. Malcolm X also states that a black man must be able to self-support, For example, “We have to learn how to own and operate the businesses of our community and develop them into some type of industry that will enable us to create employment for the people of our community so that they won't have to constantly be involved in picketing” (Malcolm X Document 7). Malcolm is saying that in order for the African community to have their own economy, they must learn how to budget, how to develop an industry so they can be self-employed. That they must know how to control their own economy so they don't have to boycott and soon follow a white man's word. What separated Dr. Martin Luther King and Malcolm X was that MLK wanted change quickly and he had the passion that the world would just stop and love one another. In some speeches he refers back to our rights as Americans. In MLK's “I Have a Dream” speech, Martin believed in equality, no discrimination and