The Civil Rights Movement: The Power Of Persuasion

1733 Words4 Pages

The power of persuasion today is often relied on to control or influence someone. The power of persuasion can be both vigorous and inferior. As someone gains influences they draw others to follow them. Persuasion is enacted in our society through our economy, Sports, politics and social media. People persuade others to get what they want, or people persuade other people to influence or give someone different benefits for example, someone with charism doesn’t try to persuade someone but by their actions and the way they interact with someone allows others to follow them. In 1954 the civil rights movement was a persuasion for African Americans to be treated equal around the world.
The civil rights movement was a struggle, struggle for social …show more content…

Malcolm X, James Baldwin, and Jackie Robinson. Martin Luther King was the biggest Activist that spoke out in which he gives one of the most famous speeches in history called, I Have a Dream.” Rosa Parks sat in a place where she didn’t belong on a segregated bus to prove a point. James Baldwin was a passionate writer who wrote personal essay in the 1950’s on racial discrimination and became a major voice for African Americans. Malcolm X was an activist who out spoke the public of black Muslim faith. He also challenged the Civil Rights Movement. Jackie Robinson Broke the color barrier on international sports. Jackie breaking the color barrier helped African Americans and colored people to change.
It was an unyielding time for African Americans during the Civil rights movement due to the laborious times and situations they had been through. African Americans tried to fight for their freedom and equal rights together by forming different civil right groups help to unite everyone together to help their movement. Eventually these groups turned the segregationally and discrimination campaign …show more content…

Because their movement went unnoticed it eventually gave them equal rights and countless opportunities. Having multiple understandings about this topic helps understand what African Americans went through to get where they are today. It was not an easy process. Although, if you are a colored person and you have a best friend who is African American which is more likely to happen today in this generation, without the Civil Right Movement we would not have friends, we would not have husbands and wives of different color. By allowing this movement to occur and to be changed things are much different than what they could have been if this movement never

Open Document