Sagot :
Considering the above questions, the reason a Black farmer in the South might have decided to join the Colored Farmers' National Alliance and Cooperative Union in the late 1880s is that:
"Southern Farmers' Alliance group did not permit black farmers to join them."
However, the reason that the same farmer might have decided to leave the CFNA after 1891 is that:
"the CFNA called for a wage increase from 50 cents to $1 per hundred pounds of cotton for black cotton-pickers, a situation a Black Farmer would see as a detriment to his farming profits."
Hence, in this casez, it is concluded that CFNA before 1891 served the interests of the Black farmers; however, by 1891, some Black Farmers felt it was no longer serving their interests.
Learn more here: https://brainly.com/question/18862021
Answer:
Black farmers joined the Colored Farmers' National Alliance and Cooperative Union because the CFNA's cooperative exchanges offered them loans at fair prices and negotiated for better prices for their crops.
After the cotton strike in 1891, in which white landowners killed strikers demanding higher pay, many Black farmers left the organization because they felt it was too dangerous.
Explanation:
Plato