Freedom Summer: The Savage Season That Made Mississippi Burn by Bruce Watson

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By Bruce Watson

A majestic background of the summer season of '64, which perpetually replaced race family members in the United States

in the summertime of 1964, with the civil rights flow stalled, seven-hundred students descended on Mississippi to sign in black electorate, educate in Freedom colleges, and dwell in sharecroppers' shacks. yet by the point their first evening within the country had ended, 3 volunteers have been useless, black church buildings had burned, and the United States had a brand new definition of freedom.

This outstanding bankruptcy in American background, the root for the arguable movie Mississippi Burning, is now the topic of Bruce Watson's considerate and riveting historic narrative. utilizing in- intensity interviews with members and citizens, Watson brilliantly captures the tottering legacy of Jim Crow in Mississippi and the chaos that introduced such nationwide figures as Martin Luther King Jr. and Pete Seeger to the nation. Freedom Summer offers finely rendered images of the brave black citizens-and Northern volunteers-who refused to be intimidated of their fight for justice, and the white Mississippians who may kill to guard a demise lifestyle. Few books have supplied such an intimate examine race relatives in the course of the deadliest days of the Civil Rights flow, and Freedom summer time will attract readers of Taylor department and Doug Blackmon.

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Extra info for Freedom Summer: The Savage Season That Made Mississippi Burn and Made America a Democracy

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In the finest scientific tradition, a number of analysts have sought to replicate Lott’s findings to confirm or disconfirm them. For example, Stanford economist John Donohue 26 The Gun Debate concluded that Lott’s findings were unsupportable from the data he used, and that there’s no reason to believe that lives were saved by the introduction of lax carry laws. Donohue showed that Lott’s estimates are sensitive to the correction of several coding errors and to reasonable changes in the statistical method.

In sum, the type of weapon deployed in violent confrontations is not just an incidental detail; it matters in several ways. Because guns provide the power to kill quickly, at a distance, and without much skill or strength, they also provide the power to intimidate other people and gain control of a violent 42 The Gun Debate situation without an actual attack. When there is a physical attack, then the type of weapon is an important determinant of whether the victim survives, with guns far more lethal than other commonly used weapons.

Some states publish the demographic statistics of permit holders. What we learn from these statistics is that the characteristics of permit holders are a lot like those of gun owners. In Florida, which has the highest prevalence of permits in the nation, most are held by men (78%) and people over 50 years old (54%). Similar patterns are found in other states for which there are data. Permits go disproportionately to those from small towns and rural areas, despite the fact that those areas tend to have lower crime rates than big cities.

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