How The Civil Rights Movement Affected America Today

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Throughout history, during the late 18th century, early and mid 19th century, and even today, many people peacefully resisted laws they felt attacked their rights as a U.S. citizen and as a human. Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, and even the entire city of Baltimore, have all used peaceful protest to rally against an unjust or unfair law or situation they felt was surpressing them from the rights they have been given. In there efforts of their protests, they have positively effected our country today by deminishing segregation, kick-starting a fight against racism for generations and counting, and a drive to find equality between all types of people.

During the 1900's, post-Civil War, segregation became an immense problem in the South, restricting the rights of many African-Americans, including where blacks sat on bus rides. Rosa Parks, an African-American female from Alabama, was one to disagree with the laws of segregation known as the Jim Crow Laws. She sat in seat …show more content…

The U.S. citizen smuggled goods behind the backs of England because they believed the tax England put on certain traded goods like paper, sugar, and tea without representation was completly unfair. They also thought it was unfair that the King of England did not want to listen to their grievances towards the Intolerable Acts, which sparked the American Revolution and the fight for independence from Britain. America's revolt towards the unfairness of Great Britain inspired other countries on the western side of the world to began to see the unfairness of their mother countries and gave them the strength to begin their resistance. American is another great example of civil disobedience that positively effected society not only the U.S., but in other

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