Womes Suffrage: The Right to Fight

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Why is voting important? Voting is the first step of involvement and interaction with your government, the government of the people, by the people and for the people. You must vote to keep America a democracy. You have no right to complain if you didn’t participate in the elections, your complaint won’t be acknowledged because you didn’t try and prevent the problem by voting. When you vote that is your voice to the government, this show the government that you support them. Participating in the poll shows the elected officials that you are a part of their movement. Lastly, your right to vote is your independence. Other people have to make your choices if you don’t vote. All of these reasons tell why voting is so important to keep America afloat. The purpose is to tell how women’s voting rights evolved and how women had to fight for suffrage in America. Everyone always didn’t have the luxury of voting. The voting right actually started off pretty one sided. In 1776 the voting right was limited to Caucasian males, over the age of 21, who own property. The government thought those chosen people where the ones with the strongest interest in the good of the government. Then in 1856, the vote was expanded to all men. Women started to speak up against only men voting, the change started to take place. It didn’t take long for the people to speak out against the one sided voting right. In the 1700s people expressed themselves with slogans such as “No taxation without representation” & “Government by the consent of the governed”. This was only the start of how the voting right was going to change. In the year 1848, Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Lucretia Moss held a women’s right convention in Seneca Falls, NY. In this convention there w... ... middle of paper ... ...ice on September 21, 1981. On November 6, 1917 Montana elected Jeanette Rankin, a republican, as the first woman in the US Congress; this opened the window for 298 more women in the future to work in Congress. Valentina Tereshkova was the very first women to go into space on the Vostok 6 in 1963. Sally Ride was the American woman to go into space on the Challenger on June 18, 1983 on mission STS-7. Women really did transform over time, with hard work and dedication to the cause anything can happen. Women are still making an impact even to this day as Janet Yellen is the first woman on the Federal Reserve Chair, confirmed on January 6, 2014. Hopefully as time goes on, women will do bigger and better things for this country. Everyone has a voice and should be able to have a voice put their input on in on things. It’s up to us to determine whether we use it or not.

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