All police had retreated leaving the streets open for rioters and protesters to impose their will on innocent bystanders. African Americans from South Central were beating white news reporters and any white people that was passing by. During this time, the Chief of Police was at a fundraiser, while the Mayor of Los Angeles was not on location either or twelve of the department's eighteen police captains because they were coming back from a training exercise outside of Los Angeles. This caused a huge communication breakdown which did not allowed the officers on the ground to do their jobs properly and stop these riots. By this time, the Mayor and Chief of Police were talking about having the National Guard assist in the riots.…
In the movie Iron Jawed Angels, women used many different methods to earn the right to vote during the Women’s Suffrage Movement. An example of one of these methods is the parade in Washington D.C. The parade took place on the same day as Woodrow Wilson’s inauguration as president of the United States. There were huge crowds on both sides of the streets.…
This movement fought for the right for women to vote. Women were encouraged to fight for their own democratic ideals. Many famous suffragists fought for women rights and equality. Elizabeth Cady Stanton wrote the Declaration of Sentiments, creation of democratic rights for women (Document I).…
There is so much happening in the world around you if you stop your inner dialogue and just take a second to listen to what is happening around you. Listening has always been something that has been hard for me; I’ve always wanted to make sure that my ideas were heard. However, in shouting out my ideas have I been covering up other ideas of people whose voices are barely heard in the first place? I as young white woman have been able to voice my opinions pretty openly, but I never thought of whose voices I was covering up and those in which I should be listening to instead of talking over. This idea of being heard and listening to new perspectives is not something new to 2016; it has been an issue long before that.…
The United States in the early twentieth century harbored a patriarchal society where minorities were socially, politically and economically oppressed. Nationwide movements such as the Civil Rights Movement pushed for equal constitutional rights for all people regardless of race. The Women Suffrage Movement began in the 1848 with the Seneca Falls Convention orchestrated by Lucretia Motts and Elizabeth Cady Stanton to begin the conversation about equality among men and women. More than seventy years later, congress passed the 19th amendment in August of 1920. Although, this was a milestone for the women’s suffrage movement, women still faced oppression and subjected to social prejudice.…
The Night of Terror was during 1917 November when a group of women were arrested for picketing for their rights at the White House. They were protesting peacefully but were responded to by force and violence. While in the Occoquan Workhouse they were beaten and tortured and denied their basic rights as humans. It was a horrific event that was not justifiable by the the guards of the Occoquan Workhouse who committed this crime. The women that were a part of a group for women's right to vote, were protesting peacefully for their right to vote, for their equality to men.…
However, the years leading up to these women reaching their goal were full of atrocities. Women were forced to explain the reasons why they should be given the right to vote. They often lectured, wrote, marched, lobbied, and practiced civil disobedience in order…
The above excerpt is reflective of how a somewhat localized women's association expanded to become more professional and organizational. For instance, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton both knew that directing only a portion of the funds towards women's suffrage would connote only minimal success. That is according to suffragist Lucy Stone "there would be plenty of helpers if there was plenty of money to pay" (MindEdge, 2015, p. 2-2, block 4). In other words, the more funding for speakers and organizers for the cause the greater of an impact towards women winning the right to vote. The progressive theory exerted by Anthony and Stanton to maintain the 'power of the purse' allowed them to merge their National Women Suffrage Association…
Between 1848 and 1920, women within the United States would begin working towards universal suffrage for all women across the nation. Some of women’s frustrations were rooted in a lack of rights including: no representation in their own government, no property rights, and most importantly the lack of voting rights guaranteed by our Constitution. Although, women were subjected to the role of housewives and child bearers many women began to become aware of their lack of rights and began organizing and protesting to further their agenda. Consequently, with ceaseless, diligence and passion for their cause, suffragists during the progressive era were able to to achieve their goal of obtaining the right to vote through the passage of the 19th amendment…
Have you ever heard the phrase “behind every successful man there is a successful woman.” Well during the Reconstruction Era, that is not what the Americans believed. At this time period, women were still seen as unequal to man. That’s why after the Civil War and when the freedmen earned rights, the women saw their chance to make a change in their life as well. They believed if they helped out the freedman’s cause then one day their cause would be seen to, so they were great supporters for freedmen’s rights.…
Twenty-nine of the thirty-four people who died were black, seventeen of whom were shot by officers. The police are supposed to be the ones who serve to protect the citizens of the United States. During the riots, this was not the case. The police did nothing to protect African American citizens from their attackers. They actually fueled the attacks themselves.…
The suffragettes used a form of indirect civil disobedience. Their main tactic was not to vote where it was not permitted, but rather to protest and picket and get arrested for it. This was effective, but differed from the civil disobedience practiced during the civil rights movement. Arguably the most famous example of peaceful resistance to a law in American history was when Rosa Parks, an African American woman, refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white man. She was arrested and briefly imprisoned, but she was extremely significant in the strength of a movement that revived the disoriented spirit of American freedom.…
The Return of Civil Disobedience Today Civil disobedience is defined as the peaceful refusal to comply with certain laws. Henry David Thoreau believed in civil disobedience and looked down upon those who thought highly of violence to get their point across. Thoreau thought so highly of civil disobedience he even went to jail for it! The Women’s March in Washington DC was to protest against President Trump and in support of feminism.…
With protests at polls, and nationwide support from women, as well as some men, made the push for women’s suffrage pass through into law, being passed as the 20th amendment in…
The article talks about protest in many ways. The article states that protesting in the U.S is possible and that anybody can do it. The people that come up to protest are mad or sad and maybe both, for one good reason. They remember about their past that they lived in. They think that the person that is ruling the U.S ( Donald Trump) is being unfair.…