The book "Black Power" was one of the most clearest manifestations of the movements change of direction in the late 1960s. Black Power was a change set out by one man to give rights back to black people and to put an end to prejudice and imperialism. One of the goals set out by Kwame Ture and Charles Hamilton, the authors of Black Power was to make black people stronger and overcome the subjection of a white society. Suppression by whites was the central problem trying to be solved. Attempting to achieve a new consciousness of the problem, by responding in their own way to a white society, was the overall goal of the movement.The main idea behind Black Power was to address the problems at hand and find solutions to them in order to find economic, political, and social justice. "It is about black people taking care of business-the business of and for black people"(Ture and Hamilton,1967,XV). Economic problems included not being able to afford a good education because of low incomes and unemployment for months at a time. Social problems such as lack of civil rights were the key motivator in the Black Power movement. White extremists groups targeting black people, such as the Klu Klux Klan, also fueled the ambition of liberation of suppression. Politically, black men and women had virtually no rights, they could not vote, or be elected into office in a predominantly white political system. As Black Power infiltrated itself into society, however, more and more political groups were being heard across the nation. Politics was the best used method of spreading the goals and intents of Black Power. Through political groups, like the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, or the SNCC, and later the Black Panther Party, the idea was made known publicly. The SNCC was one of the first organizations to produce Black Power in the mid 1960s. Many SNCC workers came to believe that further progress depended on independent black poli...