Perhaps the biggest hurdle to the success of Reconstruction was the failure of whites to accept the new position blacks had in this country. Why would they have so much difficulty in accepting them?
The faiIure of whites to accept the incipient position of blacks during Reconstruction can be traced back to long-standing racist postures and notions, as well as economic and political competition. Whites visually perceived incipiently liberated slaves gaining access to edification, jobs, and political power as a direct threat to their own puissance. The arduousness in accepting the incipient position of blacks was rooted in deeply ingrained credences and postures about race, puissance, and privilege that had been reinforced over generations. It would take many more decenniums of struggle and activism afore paramount progress would be made towards racial parity in the Coalesced States.
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