During the 1950-60s in the South, there was little integration for African-Americans where they felt that they should get the same rights as white Americans at that time. MLK felt that segregation should be abolished. He once said that we Americans should “live out of the true meaning of its creed: {the Declaration of Independence} ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.” In opposition to Dr. King however, Malcolm X believed that the government should control the segregated areas of America. He said, “Since we’re already divided, the least the government can do is let us control the areas where we live.”
White Americans at the time were overpowering and creating the prejudice against African-Americans, African-Americans did not know whether …show more content…
MLK thought there should be integration, White Americans should be a part of the CRM, and violence would not solve prejudice against African-Americans at that time. Counter to MLK, Malcolm X thought that the government should control segregated areas, White Americans should not be a part of the CRM, and that violence would solve some of their problems. Though both men had very different beliefs, they both stood for the same idea that African-Americans should have the same rights as White Americans in