Primary Goal Of The Civil Rights Movement

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The Civil Rights Movement in the United States: Still a Struggle The primary goal of the Civil Rights Movement was full, legal equality. The struggle of African Americans to achieve civil rights, including equal opportunity in employment, housing, education, voting, along with access to public facilities, and the right to not be discriminated. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Sr. supported civil rights for all Americans. Kennedy first proposed the Civil Rights Movement in June of 1963, taken over by President Lyndon B. Johnson after the assassination of Kennedy in November of 1963. The Civil Rights Act, signed by Johnson in 1964, ended segregation in public places and banned discrimination on the basis of …show more content…

I fought with upper management several times regarding applicants with disabilities. For example, there was a young, deaf woman that applied for a position in the bakery. The vice president of the company sat in with me on the interview, she was extremely impressed with this young woman. However, after the young woman left and the vice president and I were discussing the interview, I was told that it would be a safety risk to hire her. I was also told by the assistant manager of another location within the same company that my nephew, whom is also hearing impaired (not deaf), that it would be a safety risk to hire him. I understand that there may have to be some slight modifications or accommodations set in place for these persons with disabilities, but how can they not give them a simple position in the company that would be less of a safety risk. Mind you, the positions in which they were applying for were frying donuts (the young woman) and (my nephew) pushing carts and bagging groceries. One battle that I was able to win with upper management, made me proud. A young, homosexual man applied for a cashier position. Upper management was very reluctant in hiring him because of his preference and how other employees would treat him. I was able to convince them to give him a chance, and four years later, he is one of the best cashiers in the …show more content…

I feel that if King were here, in the twenty-first century, he would still be fighting for civil rights for all minorities. I think that there would be better opportunities for everyone, including the disabled. Persons such as my nephew would not have to be looked down upon and labeled as a risk. King may have turned people away from the labeling of all Muslims after the terror attack on September 11. People look at something that one or a group of persons did in the past and label the entire race or nationality. In fact, if King had been here for the last fifty years, maybe 9/11 would have not even happened. It is like the butterfly effect, change something in the past and the present would be completely different. I feel that King would be the one to continue to change the way people think of others. Now realize, I do not understand politics at all. However, just listening to other people’s views on the current election, there are politicians that think they are superior over everyone else. Yes, you may be the next president and run this country, but you started out at the same level as me and everyone else in this country. You put your pant legs on one at a time, just the same as I do. Maybe if Kennedy were still running this country, there would be no war or better laws against all forms of

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