What did Lyndon Johnson say when he addressed Americans after the Selma march
A. That the United States had a crisis in law enforcement.
B. That civil rights was not as important an issue as the Vietnam War.
C. That African Americans should drop the civil rights struggle.
D. That all Americans should work to overcome prejudice.

Respuesta :

D. that all americans should work to overcome prejudice. i hope thats right :/

Answer:

D. That all Americans should work to overcome prejudice.

Explanation:

In 1965, after the morder of a  voting rights activist by an Alabama sheriff's deputy and the resulting assault by state troopers on a monstrous dissent walk in Selma, Alabama, President Lyndon B. Johnson squeezed Congress in the accompanying discourse to pass a casting a ballot rights bill with teeth. As Majority Leader of the Senate, Johnson had debilitated the 1957 Civil Rights Act. When he expected the administration following the death of John F. Kennedy in November 1963, be that as it may, Johnson approached Americans "to wipe out from this country each hint of segregation and mistreatment that depends on race or shading," and in the accompanying discourse received the "We Shall Overcome" motto of social liberties activists. His talk and resulting endeavors broke with past presidential points of reference of resistance to or tepid help for solid social equality enactment. Johnson marked the Voting Rights Act of 1965 into law on August 6.