Separatism is different than segregation. Black Separatism is a wish based on the needs of living in a separate homeland, the token of human equality with the necessities at hand without any intervening of the whites. Segregation is the distinction of submitting groups of people of a specific culture, religion and so forth, to be put in a space that is controlled by others, giving you no sense of human dignity nor ability. A sense of demonization. X proclaims this in an interview, “A segregated community is a Negro community. But the white community, though it 's all white, is never called a segregated community. It 's a separate community. In the white community, the white man controls the economy, his own economy, his own politics, his own everything. That 's his …show more content…
It was all inferiority. A plan as said that … “by the time our people do graduate, we won 't be equipped or qualified for anything but the dirtiest, heaviest, poorest-paying jobs. Jobs that no one else wants.” Integration was not the answer, for the whites would, of course, want the most high-end jobs, built of high quality and luxury, and the rest could be ‘fetched off’. Not only would this inferiority be a factor, but the culture and pride of the little black community there was, would disappear or stagnate if they lead to those poor paying jobs. Some would not even be able to earn this job, based on the poor control of the education system they were brought up with, allowing a fourfold risk of black unemployment. Most importantly, X spoke that integration would never adapt to a colorblind society, for there will always be a superior, a dominant, who will oppress a black. Separation was the only way as X viewed, and the closest way to a prominent society that had a promising system of necessities, and black pride that would not astray. Separation was the successful note X had achieved and continued until his death, of speeches and petitions to acquire a governmental law where this community would