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Defining Documents in American History: Dissent and Protest

What We Want

by Aaron Gulyas, Keith E. Sealing

Date: 1966

Author: Stokely Carmichael

Genre: Magazine article

Summary Overview

This article shares many of the same ideas and examples as the speech Carmichael would give in October, 1966 at the University of California at Berkley. This article, however, goes more deeply into the role and philosophy of SNCC (the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee). Carmichael highlights SNCC’s role as a focal point for a younger group of activists than more established organizations like Martin Luther King Jr.’S Southern Christian Leadership Council or the NAACP. The article also discusses SNCC’s goals of obtaining not only equal rights but also the need for the African American community to gain political power. It is in connection with this that we see Carmichael use the phrase “Black Power” as well as discuss the activities of the developing Black Panther party.

There is also, in Carmichael’s article, indications of the eventual turn away from the pacifistic, non-confrontational methods that typified the methods of the SCLC. He also discusses the need for civil rights organizations not only to work fully and exclusively for the needs and benefit of the communities which they represent but also to “speak in the tone of that community.” Carmichael also speaks to specific efforts to gain political gains and power in southern states as well as the development of the emerging Black Panther party in northern and western urban centers like Los Angeles, New York, and other cities.

Defining Moment

The year 1966 was pivotal for both of Carmichael’s major concerns: civil rights and the Vietnam War. This article was written when the political and social climate of the country was being shaped by the assassinations of three major figures. President John F. Kennedy had been assassinated on November 22, 1963, and the black civil rights activist Malcolm X had been killed on February 21, 1965. Prior to this articles publication, Carmichael had taken part in the March against Fear from Memphis, Tennessee, to Jackson, Mississippi. The march had been organized by James Meredith, the first African American student at the University of Mississippi, where he had been subject to constant harassment. After graduation he organized the march, which began on June 5, 1966, in order to bring attention to black voting rights issues in the South and to help blacks overcome fear of violence. During the march he was shot in an assassination attempt by Aubrey James Norvell, but he survived. Several civil rights leaders, including Carmichael, joined the march after the shooting. Carmichael was arrested in Greenwood, Mississippi, while participating in the march. When he rejoined the marchers, he galvanized them with a speech at a rally; that speech has also been referred to as his “Black Power” speech.

When this article was published in the early autumn of 1966, Carmichael was still not only a member of SNCC but also in many ways its public face and certainly its most charismatic speaker. He was particularly highly regarded as a speaker on college campuses. SNCC, formed in 1960, was a major force in the civil rights movement. It organized voter registration drives throughout the South and events such as the 1963 March on Washington. Leaders of the organization included such notables of the civil rights movement as Julian Bond, John Lewis, Marion Barry, and Carmichael’s successor as chairman, H. Rap Brown. In addition to its “Black Power” focus, SNCC was also involved in protests against the Vietnam War.

Author Biography

Stokely Carmichael, later in life known also as Kwame Ture, was born on June 29, 1941, in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago. Carmichael eventually joined his parents, who had emigrated to New York. In 1960 he began attending Howard University, where he became involved with the newly formed SNCC. While he was a member of SNCC in 1965, Carmichael played a lead role in increasing the number of registered black voters in Lowndes County, Alabama, from seventy to twenty-six hundred. As a representative of the militant wing of SNCC, Carmichael rose to become the organization’s chairman in 1966.

While Carmichael was at first supportive of the work of Martin Luther King, he would later repudiate King’s nonviolent stance. He would, however, continue to join King in speaking out against the Vietnam War. Through the force of his rhetoric, Carmichael became a celebrity, but others in SNCC resented his prominence and he was soon formally expelled from the organization. He joined the more militant Black Panther Party and as “honorary prime minister” of the Panthers, he became an even more forceful critic of the Vietnam War, lecturing around the world (often on college campuses).

After the assassination of King on April 4, 1968, Carmichael was in Washington, D.C., and, although he was no longer officially a member of SNCC, led members of that organization in trying to maintain order. In 1969 he left the United States and the Panthers to live in the Republic of Guinea. From his base in Guinea, Carmichael wrote and spoke, advocating pan-Africanism and Socialism.

Carmichael died of prostate cancer on November 15, 1998, at the age of fifty-seven, Before his death, he had claimed that the Federal Bureau of Investigation had infected him with a strain of cancer in order to assassinate him. It was later learned that he had been the subject of surveillance by the FBI and the Central Intelligence Agency since 1968.

Historical Document

One of the tragedies of the struggle against racism is that up to now there has been no national organization which could speak to the growing militancy of young black people in the urban ghetto. There has been only a civil rights movement, whose tone of voice was adapted to an audience of liberal whites. It served as a sort of buffer zone between them and angry young blacks. None of its so-called leaders could go into a rioting community and be listened to. In a sense, I blame ourselves—together with the mass media—for what has happened in Watts, Harlem, Chicago, Cleveland, Omaha. Each time the people in those cities saw Martin Luther King get slapped, they became angry; when they saw four little black girls bombed to death, they were angrier; and when nothing happened, they were steaming. We had nothing to offer that they could see, except to go out and be beaten again. We helped to build their frustration.

For too many years, black Americans marched and had their heads broken and got shot. They were saying to the country, “Look, you guys are supposed to be nice guys and we are only going to do what we are supposed to do—why do you beat us up, why don’t you give us what we ask, why don’t you straighten yourselves out?” After years of this, we are at almost the same point—because we demonstrated from a position of weakness. We cannot be expected any longer to march and have our heads broken in order to say to whites: come on, you’re nice guys. For you are not nice guys. We have found you out.

An organization which claims to speak for the needs of a community—as does the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee—must speak in the tone of that community, not as somebody else’s buffer zone. This is the significance of black power as a slogan. For once, black people are going to use the words they want to use—not just the words whites want to hear. And they will do this no matter how often the press tries to stop the use of the slogan by equating it with racism or separatism.

An organization which claims to be working for the needs of a community—as SNCC does—must work to provide that community with a position of strength from which to make its voice heard. This is the significance of black power beyond the slogan.

Black power can be clearly defined for those who do not attach the fears of white America to their questions about it. We should begin with the basic fact that black Americans have two problems: they are poor and they are black. All other problems arise from this two-sided reality: lack of education, the so-called apathy of black men. Any program to end racism must address itself to that double reality.

Almost from its beginning, SNCC sought to address itself to both conditions with a program aimed at winning political power for impoverished Southern blacks. We had to begin with politics because black Americans are a propertyless people in a country where property is valued above all. We had to work for power, because this country does not function by morality, love, and nonviolence, but by power. Thus we determined to win political power, with the idea of moving on from there into activity that would have economic effects. With power, the masses could make or participate in making the decisions which govern their destinies, and thus create basic change in their day-to-day lives.

But if political power seemed to be the key to self-determination, it was also obvious that the key had been thrown down a deep well many years earlier. Disenfranchisement, maintained by racist terror, makes it impossible to talk about organizing for political power in 1960. The right to vote had to be won and SNCC workers devoted their energies to this from 1961 to 1965. They set up voter registration drives in the Deep South. They created pressure for the vote by holding mock elections in Mississippi in 1963 and by helping to establish the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP) in 1964. That struggle was eased, though not won, with the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act SNCC workers could then address themselves to the question: “Who can we vote for, to have our needs met—how do we make our vote meaningful?”

SNCC had already gone to Atlantic City for recognition of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party by the Democratic convention and been rejected; it had gone with the MFDP to Washington for recognition by Congress and been rejected. In Arkansas, SNCC helped thirty Negroes to run for School Board elections; all but one were defeated, and there was evidence of fraud and intimidation sufficient to cause their defeat. In Atlanta, Julian Bond ran for the state legislature and was elected—twice—and unseated—twice. In several states, black farmers ran in elections for agricultural committees which make crucial decisions concerning land use, loans, etc. Although they won places on a number of committees, they never gained the majorities needed to control them.

All of the efforts were attempts to win black power. Then, in Alabama, the opportunity came to see how blacks could be organized on an independent party basis. An unusual Alabama law provides that any group of citizens can nominate candidates for county office and, if they win 20 percent of the vote, may be recognized as a county political party. The same then applies on a state level. SNCC went to organize in several counties such as Lowndes, where black people—who form 80 per cent of the population and have an average annual income of $943—felt they could accomplish nothing within the framework of the Alabama Democratic Party because of its racism and because the qualifying fee for this year’s elections was raised from $50 to $500 in order to prevent most Negroes from becoming candidates. On May 3, five new county “freedom organizations” convened and nominated candidates for the offices of sheriff, tax assessor, members of the school boards. These men and women are up for election in November—if they live until then. Their ballot symbol is the black panther a bold, beautiful animal, representing the strength and dignity of black demands today. A man needs a black panther on his side when he and his family must endure—as hundreds of Alabamians have endured—loss of job, eviction, starvation, and sometimes death, for political activity. He may also need a gun and SNCC reaffirms the right of black men everywhere to defend themselves when threatened or attacked. As for initiating the use of violence, we hope that such programs as ours will make that unnecessary; but it is not for us to tell black communities whether they can or cannot use any particular form of action to resolve their problems. Responsibility for the use of violence by black men, whether in self-defense or initiated by them, lies with the white community.

This is the specific historical experience from which SNCC’s call for “black power” emerged on the Mississippi march last July. But the concept of “black power” is not a recent or isolated phenomenon: It has grown out of the ferment of agitation and activity by different people and organizations in many black communities over the years. Our last year of work in Alabama added a new concrete possibility. In Lowndes County, for example, black power will mean that if a Negro is elected sheriff, he can end police brutality. If a black man is elected tax assessor, he can collect and channel funds for the building of better roads and schools serving black people—thus advancing the move from political power into the economic arena. In such areas as Lowndes, where black men have a majority, they will attempt to use it to exercise control. This is what they seek: control. Where Negroes lack a majority, black power means proper representation and sharing of control. It means the creation of power bases from which black people can work to change statewide or nationwide patterns of oppression through pressure from strength—instead of weakness. Politically, black power means what it has always meant to SNCC: the coming-together of black people to elect representatives and to force those representatives to speak to their needs. It does not mean merely putting black faces into office. A man or woman who is black and from the slums cannot be automatically expected to speak to the needs of black people. Most of the black politicians we see around the country today are not what SNCC means by black power. The power must be that of a community, and emanate from there.

SNCC today is working in both North and South on programs of voter registration and independent political organizing. In some places, such as Alabama, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, and New Jersey, independent organizing under the black panther symbol is in progress. The creation of a national “black panther party” must come about: it will take time to build, and it is much too early to predict its success. We have no infallible master plan and we make no claim to exclusive knowledge of how to end racism; different groups will work in their own different ways. SNCC cannot spell out the full logistics of self-determination but it can address itself to the problem by helping black communities define their needs, realize their strength, and go into action along a variety of lines which they must choose for themselves. Without knowing all the answers, it can address itself to the basic problem of poverty: to the fact that in Lowndes County, 86 white families own 90 percent of the land. What are black people in that county going to do for jobs, where are they going to get money? There must be reallocation of land and money.

Ultimately, the economic foundations of this country must be shared if black people are to control their lives. The colonies of the United States—and this includes the black ghettoes within its borders, north and south—must be liberated. For a century, this nation has been like an octopus of exploitation, its tentacles stretching from Mississippi and Harlem to South America, the Middle East, southern Africa, and Vietnam; the form of exploitation varies from area to area but the essential result has been the same—a powerful few have been maintained and enriched at the expense of the poor and voiceless colored masses. This pattern must be broken. As its grip loosens here and there around the world, the hopes of black Americans become more realistic. For racism to die, a totally different America must be born.

This is what the white society does not wish to face; this is why that society prefers to talk about integration. But integration speaks not at all to the problem of poverty, only to the problem of blackness. Integration today means the man who “makes it,” leaving his black brothers behind in the ghetto as fast as his new sports car will take him. It has no relevance to the Harlem wino or to the cotton-picker making three dollars a day. As a lady I know in Alabama once said, “the food that Ralph Bunche eats doesn’t fill my stomach.”

Integration, moreover, speaks to the problem of blackness in a despicable way. As a goal, it has been based on complete acceptance of the fact that in order to have a decent house or education, blacks must move into a white neighborhood or send their children to a white school. This reinforces, among both black and white, the idea that “white” is automatically better and “black” is by definition inferior. This is why integration is a subterfuge for the maintenance of white supremacy. It allows the nation to focus on a handful of Southern children who get into white schools, at great price, and to ignore the 94 percent who are left behind in unimproved all-black schools. Such situations will not change until black people have power—to control their own school boards, in this case. Then Negroes become equal in a way that means something, and integration ceases to be a one-way street. Then integration doesn’t mean draining skills and energies from the ghetto into white neighborhoods; then it can mean white people moving from Beverly Hills into Watts, white people joining the Lowndes County Freedom Organization. Then integration becomes relevant.…

To most whites, black power seems to mean that the Mau Mau are coming to the suburbs at night. The Mau Mau are coming, and whites must stop them. Articles appear about plots to “get Whitey,” creating an atmosphere in which “law and order must be maintained.” Once again, responsibility is shifted from the oppressor to the oppressed. Other whites chide, “Don’t forget—you’re only 10 percent of the population; if you get too smart, we’ll wipe you out.” If they are liberals, they complain, “what about me?—don’t you want my help any more?” These are people supposedly concerned about black Americans, but today they think first of themselves, of their feelings of rejection. Or they admonish, “you can’t get anywhere without coalitions,” without considering the problems of coalition with whom?; on what terms (coalescing from weakness can mean absorption, betrayal)?; when? Or they accuse us of “polarizing the races” by our calls for black unity, when the true responsibility for polarization lies with whites who will not accept their responsibility as the majority power for making the democratic process work.…

Whites will not see that I, for example, as a person oppressed because of my blackness, have common cause with other blacks who are oppressed because of blackness. This is not to say that there are no white people who see things as I do, but that it is black people I must speak to first. It must be the oppressed to whom SNCC addresses itself primarily, not to friends from the oppressing group.

From birth, black people are told a set of lies about themselves. We are told that we are lazy—yet I drive through the Delta area of Mississippi and watch black people picking cotton in the hot sun for fourteen hours. We are told, “If you work hard, you’ll succeed”—but if that were true, black people would own this country. We are oppressed because we are black—not because we are ignorant, not because we are lazy, not because we’re stupid (and got good rhythm), but because we’re black.…

The need for psychological equality is the reason why SNCC today believes that blacks must organize in the black community. Only black people can convey the revolutionary idea that black people are able to do things themselves. Only they can help create in the community an aroused and continuing black consciousness that will provide the basis for political strength. In the past, white allies have furthered white supremacy without the whites involved realizing it—or wanting it, I think. Black people must do things for themselves; they must get poverty money they will control and spend themselves, they must conduct tutorial programs themselves so that black children can identify with black people. This is one reason Africa has such importance: The reality of black men ruling their own nations gives blacks elsewhere a sense of possibility, of power, which they do not now have.

This does not mean we don’t welcome help, or friends. But we want the right to decide whether anyone is, in fact, our friend. In the past, black Americans have been almost the only people whom everybody and his momma could jump up and call their friends. We have been tokens, symbols, objects—as I was in high school to many young whites, who liked having “a Negro friend.” We want to decide who is our friend, and we will not accept someone who comes to us and says: “If you do X, Y, and Z, then I’ll help you.” We will not be told whom we should choose as allies. We will not be isolated from any group or nation except by our own choice. We cannot have the oppressors telling the oppressed how to rid themselves of the oppressor.…

There is a vital job to be done among poor whites. We hope to see, eventually, a coalition between poor blacks and poor whites. That is the only coalition which seems acceptable to us, and we see such a coalition as the major internal instrument of change in American society. SNCC has tried several times to organize poor whites; we are trying again now, with an initial training program in Tennessee. It is purely academic today to talk about bringing poor blacks and whites together, but the job of creating a poor-white power bloc must be attempted. The main responsibility for it falls upon whites. Black and white can work together in the white community where possible; it is not possible, however, to go into a poor Southern town and talk about integration. Poor whites everywhere are becoming more hostile—not less—partly because they see the nation’s attention focused on black poverty and nobody coming to them. Too many young middle-class Americans, like some sort of Pepsi generation, have wanted to come alive through the black community; they’ve wanted to be where the action is—and the action has been in the black community.

Black people do not want to “take over” this country. They don’t want to “get whitey”; they just want to get him off their backs, as the saying goes. It was for example the exploitation by Jewish landlords and merchants which first created black resentment toward Jews—not Judaism. The white man is irrelevant to blacks, except as an oppressive force. Blacks want to be in his place, yes, but not in order to terrorize and lynch and starve him. They want to be in his place because that is where a decent life can be had.…

As for white America, perhaps it can stop crying out against “black supremacy,” “black nationalism,” “racism in reverse,” and begin facing reality. The reality is that this nation, from top to bottom, is racist; that racism is not primarily a problem of “human relations” but of an exploitation maintained—either actively or through silence—by the society as a whole. Camus and Sartre have asked, can a man condemn himself? Can whites, particularly liberal whites, condemn themselves? Can they stop blaming us, and blame their own system? Are they capable of the shame which might become a revolutionary emotion?

We have found that they usually cannot condemn themselves, and so we have done it. But the rebuilding of this society, if at all possible, is basically the responsibility of whites—not blacks. We won’t fight to save the present society, in Vietnam or anywhere else. We are just going to work, in the way we see fit, and on goals we define, not for civil rights but for all our human rights.

Glossary

“Four little black girls bombed to death”: a reference to the victims killed in the bombing of Birmingham, Alabama’s 16th Street Baptist Church on September 15, 1963.

Lowndes County: County in Georgia where, in 1965 the Lowndes County Freedom Organization was formed. This organization would be the basis for the Black Panther Party.

Mau Mau: Anti-colonial rebels in Kenya, Africa who staged an uprising against the British during the 1950s

Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party: Splinter of the Democratic party focused on registering African American voters in Mississippi in 1964.

Ralph Bunche: Nobel Peace Prize winning political scientist and diplomat who was active in the civil rights movement of the 1950s ad 1960s.

“Watts, Harlem, Chicago…”: Sites of rioting or violent demonstrations during the mid-1960s

Document Analysis

Carmichael begins by recognizing that traditional civil rights organizations did not address “the growing militancy of young black people in the urban ghetto” but, rather, address themselves to largely white, northern liberals. he also notes that no “so-called” civil rights leaders would be able to get “a rioting community” to listen to them. Such a situation occurred after the Watts riot in Los Angeles, when Martin Luther King Jr. was heckled by some when he delivered a speech there. The strategy of nonviolence, Carmichael claims, offers these young people nothing but the opportunity to be repeatedly brutalized by the authorities and asserts that African Americans have been making demands equality from a position of weakness.

Carmichael then, in the third paragraph, argues that organizations that claim to speak for the community must serve that community and speak its language, not serve the needs or present themselves as acceptable for other groups (as he claims other civil rights organizations and leaders have done). This, he explains, is the origin of the term “black power.” Despite the discomfort the term may cause, the term is significant for it is an example of African Americans using “the words they want to use—not just the words whites wants to hear.” In other words, Black Power is an expression of black activists defining their own goals and parameters rather than tailoring their aims or methods to be acceptable to white America.

He goes on to define the “two-sided reality” facing African Americans, “they are poor and they are black.” Racism and economic inequality are the core crises from which other problems. African Americans are “a propertyless people in a country where property is valued above all.” To remedy this, Carmichael explains, black Americans must work to achieve and exercise power, since “this country does not function by morality, love, and nonviolence.” Political power would make movement toward economic equality possible.

In the sixth paragraph, Carmichael explains that political power has been out of reach for African Americans due to “disenfranchisement, maintained by racist terror.” He goes on to detail the efforts of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party to register voters in 1964 and the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965. The question then became, “who can we vote for to save our needs met—how to we make our vote meaningful?” Carmichael describes the successful efforts of African Americans to seek political office and how these efforts have been met with intimidation and defeat. This was due, at least partially, to efforts within the Democratic party to suppress black candidates—particularly in the south.

The solution to this issue, he explains, is to organize African Americans as an independent political party. This first happened in Lowndes County, Alabama when the state’s Democratic party took measures to keep African Americans from running for office. Known as “freedom organizations,” these groups symbol was a black panther. In 1966, the groups had several candidates who would be on the ballot in the November elections-“if they live until then.

Carmichael then discusses how SNCC “reaffirms the right of black men everywhere to defend themselves when threatened or attacked” and while they hope their plans will prevent the need for violence, “responsibility for the use of violence by black men, whether in self-defense or initiated by them, lies with the white community.” Increasingly, as this article goes on, Carmichael is moving away from the rhetoric of nonviolence—not toward a rhetoric of revolutionary violence but, rather, a realistic appraisal of the threats faced by African Americans.

After detailing more voter registration efforts and discussing the national growth of the black panther party, Carmichael discusses his view of the “black ghettoes” within the United States as being colonized territories, placing them in the same category of colonial territories in that, during the 1960s, were fighting for liberation from western powers. He argues that liberation from economic exploitation is as necessary for African Americans as for those in places like Vietnam. Integration, he asserts will not fully address the economic inequalities in American society. He also denounces integration of neighborhoods and schools, claiming that “integration is a subterfuge for the maintenance of white supremacy” that “allows the nation to focus on a handful of Southern children who get into white schools, at great price, and to ignore the 94 percent who are left behind in unimproved all-black schools.” Black Americans in positions of political power can bring real, lasting change.

He also clarifies the idea of “Black Power,” refuting the idea that it is synonymous with black supremacy or similar to the revolutionary violence that had taken place in colonial Africa (he references the Mau Mau uprising in Kenya in this regard). He concludes by explaining that rather than black supremacy, SNCC has attempted to organize poor whites and that a “coalition” between poor whites and poor blacks is the only force that will fundamentally affect economic exploitation of all Americans.

Essential Themes

In this article, Stokely Carmichael refined the meaning of the term “Black Power,” repositioning the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee as something more than a young people’s version of traditional civil rights groups like the NAACP or the Southern Christian Leadership Council. He does this in two ways. One way is by pushing back against the unqualified promotion of nonviolence in the face of police brutality, asserting that self defense is acceptable. The other way Carmichael and SNCC distinguished themselves was by actively promoting not only equal rights but the seizure—through democratic means—of political power. Its was this latter goal that led to the creation of the groups that, eventually, would form the basis of the Black Panther Party. This was connected to Carmichael’s rejection of the perceived need for civil rights organizations to make themselves acceptable to white political leaders and the public. Carmichael also emphasized the theme of economic inequality and injustice, linking it to both American racism and as a problem that cannot be remedied by “equal rights” but, rather by political power.

Bibliography and Additional Reading

1 

Asante, Molefi Kete. 100 Greatest African Americans: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Amherst, N.Y. Prometheus Books, 2002.

2 

Carmichael, Stokely. Stokely Speaks: Black Power Back to Pan-Africanism. New York, Random House, 1971.

3 

———, and Charles V. Hamilton. Black Power: The Politics of Liberation in America. New York: Random House, 1967.

4 

———, and Ekwueme Michael Thelwell. Ready for Revolution: The Life and Struggles of Stokely Carmichael. New York: Scribner, 2003.

5 

Carson, Clayborne. In Struggle: SNCC and the Black Awakening of the 1960s. Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Press, 1981. Cwiklik, Robert. Stokely Carmichael and Black Power. Brookfield, Conn. Millbrook Press, 1993.

6 

Johnson, Jacqueline. Stokely Carmichael: The Story of Black Power. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. Silver Burdett, 1990.

7 

Sellers, Cleveland, and Robert Terrell. The River of No Return: The Autobiography of a Black Militant in the Life and Death of SNCC. New York: Morrow, 1973.

8 

Zinn, Howard. SNCC: The New Abolitionists. Boston: Beacon Press, 1964.

Websites

9 

Kaufman, Michael T. “Stokely Carmichael, Rights Leader Who Coined ‘Black Power,’ Dies at 57.” New York Times, November 16, 1998. http://www.interchange.org/Kwameture/nytimes111698.html

10 

“Stokely Carmichael.” Federal Bureau of Investigation Web site. http://foia.fbi.gov/foiaindex/carmichael_stokely.htm

Citation Types

MLA 9th
Gulyas, Aaron, and Keith E. Sealing. "What We Want." Defining Documents in American History: Dissent and Protest, edited by Aaron Gulyas, Salem Press, 2017. Salem Online, online.salempress.com/articleDetails.do?articleName=DDProtest_0072.
APA 7th
Gulyas, A., & Sealing, K. E. (2017). What We Want. In A. Gulyas (Ed.), Defining Documents in American History: Dissent and Protest. Salem Press. online.salempress.com.
CMOS 17th
Gulyas, Aaron and Sealing, Keith E. "What We Want." Edited by Aaron Gulyas. Defining Documents in American History: Dissent and Protest. Hackensack: Salem Press, 2017. Accessed May 30, 2026. online.salempress.com.