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Roy Wilkins Inequality In Vietnam

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The Black soldiers fought for equality throughout the ranks because they were being taken into the military at the same rate as the whit inductees. Many black soldiers would be segregated would serve primarily in non-combat units but they still served with pride. Being a part of this great military and an opportunity for them to create an identity for themselves was looked upon as progress. In military segregation, black American leaders employed a variety of strategies; they mobilized the black civilian workforce, black women’s groups, black college students, and an interracial coalition to resist this blatant inequality.

Roy Wilkins, head of the NAACP during the Vietnam War, provided strong support for President Lyndon B. Johnson's policy in Vietnam. Wilkins shared a friendship with President Johnson as well as a concern for alienating a President who had done so much to advance the cause of civil rights for African-Americans. Wilkins also believed that the increasing role of young black males in Vietnam would further regulate their overall stature within American society. Many of the soldiers approved of their involvement in the war, with some even expressing views critical of Martin Luther King, Muhammad Ali, and …show more content…

NAACP support for the Vietnam War failed to appropriately reconcile the increased industrial and social standings of young black males with the high percentage of black soldiers who were killed or injured in combat. The evolution of the Black Power movement exposed young African-Americans against a historically conservative civil rights organization that, by the end of the 1960's, could no longer connect with a majority of African-American youth, many of whom had grown disillusioned with the promises of

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