Do you mean Brown v. Board of Education? That was a unianimous opinion: there is no dissenting opinion.
2006-06-17 16:44:09
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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There was no minority opinion in Brown v. Board of Education. Why not? Because Brown v. Board was a unanimous decision, meaning that the entire Supreme Court ruled in favor of desegregating public schools. This was deliberate on the part of Chief Justice Earl Warren, who convinced the other judges of the need for a unanimous decision. He wanted to show that the Court was fully behind the idea of racial equality. So the Court rendered a 9 to 0 vote in favor of Brown..
2006-06-17 16:46:50
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answer #2
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answered by memphisroom 2
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I think minorities generally had a high opinion of Brown v. Board of Education.
2006-06-17 17:27:08
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answer #3
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answered by Loss Leader 5
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You must mean "BROWN v Board of Education", the landmark
civil rights case which went before the US Supreme Court.
The Topeka Kansas school district, like many in the United States
at that time, had so-called "separate but equal" or racially segregated schools. The court ruled "separate" meant "unequal" and that that violated the equal treatment under law provisions of the US Constitution (in the 14th Amendment).
I can't tell you the minority opinion. Try wikipedia, but remember it's "BROWN" not "BOARD"!
2006-06-17 16:46:32
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answer #4
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answered by birchardvilleobservatory 7
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Earl Warren wrote the single opinion in BROWN v. BOARD OF EDUCATION, 347 U.S. 483 (1954)
2006-06-17 17:00:55
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answer #5
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answered by CAPTREE 4
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Is this a play on words? "Minority" opinion. The decision was unanimous; it's generally called a "dissenting" opinion.
2006-06-17 16:56:05
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answer #6
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answered by MeinOH 3
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