Martin Luther King III

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    "You must never be fearful of what you are doing when it is right"(Parks). Peaceful resistance to laws positively impacts a society because it makes people aware of the issue(s), educates society and makes a statement without harming others. Through peaceful resistance much more can be accomplished compared to using violent resistance or violent tactics. Rosa Parks refusing to give up her seat in Montgomery, Alabama to a white gentleman is a prime example of how civil disobedience has…

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    tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war that the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality... I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word.” On December 10, 1964, Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. gave his acceptance speech for the Nobel Peace Prize to a full auditorium at Oslo University. Less than 20% of the attendees were black. They sat in their own area, sonorously separated from the white men and women attending.…

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    Stephanie Sarlo Sarlo 1 Mrs. Henderson American History Period 3 February 18, 2017 Rosa Parks Rosa Parks, born Rosa Louise McCauley, impacted the 20th Century by helping to initiate the Civil Rights movement, dismantling the Segregation Laws, and the founding of the Institution for Self-Development. At an early age Mrs. Parks faced many injustices wherever she went.…

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    Many rebellions have happened over time but this one is Shays Rebellion. Although many think the farmers harmed the country, nevertheless they actually helped it so they hero fighters because they helped each other from unlawful punishments, spoke up for what they thought, and kept the government/ country growing. The farmers were hero fighters because they kept each other from the unlawful punishment by the Judges. This idea came from Daniel Gray when he wrote “now the government will not…

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    Why We Can’t Wait by Martin Luther King Jr. is a gripping account of the struggle that African Americans faced to achieve rights and desegregation in Birmingham, Alabama. The Southern Christian Leadership Conference (S.C.L.C) along with the Fred Shuttlesworth’s Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights (A.C.H.R.) fought for the rights of African Americans. Bull Connor, who was the Commissioner of Public Safety, did everything in his power to prevent the desegregation and equality of rights for…

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    “We Shall Overcome” was a song that stood by time and cultural meaning. This been sung for many years that deal with protest and hope. But the main focus was changing the underwent and the place of American civil rights movement. This song mean so much to the African-American community that have so many reason with history, how the words is means within the song, and how the people come together as one. The song was built on past tradition that was created from generation to generation.…

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    coordinated marches and sit-ins led by the Alabama Christian Movement for human rights and Dr. Martin Luther King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference began in Birmingham, Alabama. It was a non-violent campaign made up of African American people. Judge W. A. Jeakins issued a ruling preventing “parading, demonstrating, boycotting, trespassing, and picketing.” The leaders decided not to follow this ruling, so Dr. King, Ralph Abernathy, Fred Shuttlesworth, and other Marchers were arrested.…

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    The Voting Rights Movement

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    On March 30, 1870 the ratification of the 15th amendment granted African American men the right to vote. After the ratificantion of the 15th amendment, little had changed and blacks were still being denied their consitutioanl rights. Discriminatory practices such as Jim crow laws, property restrictions, literacy tests, and disenfranchisment were put in place in order to continue white privdledge. After being denied their rights, blacks started pushing for equality more than they ever had before…

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    his time as a Civil Rights Activist, Martin Luther was put in jail many times, 30 times to be exact. Many of the times he got arrested was because of unjust reasons such as acts of civil disobedience, for driving thirty miles per hour in a 25 miles per hour zone. Other times were for the protests that were going on. He was sent to Reidsville State Prison Farm when he got arrested. August 28, 1963, over 200,000 americans came together in Washington D.C. for the “March on Washington” rally. The…

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    subject, and I understand why. There is a huge difference between Martin Luther King Jr, and the riots that are going on right now because Donald Trump got elected as President. Dr. King's protests were peaceful and did not interrupt everyday life, even though he felt strongly about the subject. The protesters now are disrupting the streets and are committing arson and other crimes (such as burning the flag-which is illegal). Dr. King got a lot further getting societal support using his…

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