On Friday, January 20th the 45th president of the United States was inaugurated. This momentous event was both celebrated and protested throughout America. For Donald Trump and his supporters, this day was unforgettable: Donald was sworn to the presidency, Obama departed from the white house, Trump had the traditional congressional luncheon, the inaugural parade took place, and Donald signed one of his first documents as president. Many of Trump's supporters celebrated this by throwing galas and promoting their new president in any way possible. However, at the same time, protests, both peaceful and violent, were held all over the world. Some of the more violent protests happened in downtown Washington, Seattle, New York, and Oregon. However,
these weren't the only protests against Trump's presidency . Anti- Trump rallies took place across the globe in places such as Australia, London, Hong Kong, Berlin, and Palestine. They even went as far as to attend his inauguration, where they voiced their protests and made their opinions known. I think that Donald Trump's speech was very eloquent and well written. His words seemed sincere and he delivered it with a strong, confident voice. Trump said that he would eradicate terrorism from America, an issue which has become more and more pressing. We need a fierce, sensible leader to fight against those willing to do us harm, and, hopefully, he will prioritize our country's safety. He also said that we need to defend our own country before any other and stop fighting other country's wars. While I think that and while it is important to put our country's needs first, we cannot forget about the underprivileged people who live in warring countries. Trump also painted some Americans in an unseemly light and made it seem like a very poor and struggling country. He said that our economical struggles were severe and our negligent behavior towards defending our border was soon to change. Protecting our borders are essential to a healthy nation but I don't think that it deserves the excessive amount of stress that Trump is putting on the subject. Despite these areas in his speech I disliked, the rest of it was very powerful and well delivered. I hope that he will keep his promises of leading our country to greatness and that he will continue to keep values and morals clear throughout his presidency.
Group leader’s early estimates of the number of participants proved to be very optimistic. Approximately 5,000 protesters had gathered in Lincoln Park by the Sunday evening before the convention was to begin. The first confrontations between demonstrators and law officials occurred following a peaceful afternoon march. The police, enforcing a ban on overnight camping in the park, randomly attacked protesters, bystanders, and media personnel, chasing them into the city’s Old town District. This pattern was repeated on August 28, following a legal rally in Grant Park, across from the Hilton Hotel, where a number of delegates were staying. The rally was attended by by S.D.S., Yippies, National Mobilization, and Open Convention protesters. In addition to a number of older, nonviolent demonstrators, including disillusioned McCarthy supporters. (Chicago Riots Mar the Democratic National
Peaceful resistance to laws positively impact a free society because if there isn't, how will people hear the voices of the oppressed and mistreated? Peaceful resistance comes a long way in trying to advance the rights and customs of the oppressed today. For example, The Salt March of 1930 was based on the Salt Act of 1882, which excluded the people the India from producing or getting salt, only British officials. Mahatma Gandhi was the leader of this protest. According to an article by time.com, it says that "The protest continued until Gandhi was granted bargaining rights at a negotiation in London. India didn’t see freedom until 1947, but the salt satyagraha (his brand of civil disobedience) established Gandhi as a force to be reckoned with and set a powerful precedent for future nonviolent protestors, including Martin Luther King Jr.(Sarah Begley,2015)" This means the salt march was a start for India's independence. Also, Gandhi's brand of civil disobedience set precedents for future nonviolent protests. Another Example of how peaceful protests
Protests occurred the next day, Friday, May 1, across United States college campuses where anti-war viewpoints ran high. At Kent State University, many speeches against the war and the Nixon administration were given. Satrom, the Mayor was fearful that local forces would be insufficient to meet the amount of protesters, and he called the Governor's office to make an official request for assistance from the Ohio National Guard for the protest on Monday. At noon on Monday May 4th, General Canterbury of the National Guard made the decision to order the protesters to clear out. A Kent State police officer standing by the Guard made an announcement using a bullhorn. When the protesters did not clear out, they drove across the Commons and started to tell eve...
In 1981, former president Ronald Reagan was inaugurated into office and just a couple days ago current president Donald Trump was inaugurated into office. When a president is inaugurated into house, they generally give an inaugural speech about what they will and can do for America. In Ronald Reagan’s inaugural address, he shares his thoughts about America and plans to come. Using different literary devices Ronald Reagan characterizes America as a broken country but, by using hard work and effort, America can truly be great.
The Chicago riot was the most serious of the multiple that happened during the Progressive Era. The riot started on July 27th after a seventeen year old African American, Eugene Williams, did not know what he was doing and obliviously crossed the boundary of a city beach. Consequently, a white man on the beach began stoning him. Williams, exhausted, could not get himself out of the water and eventually drowned. The police officer at the scene refused to listen to eyewitness accounts and restrained from arresting the white man. With this in mind, African Americans attacked the police officer. As word spread of the violence, and the accounts distorted themselves, almost all areas in the city, black and white neighborhoods, became informed. By Monday morning, everyone went to work and went about their business as usual, but on their way home, African Americans were pulled from trolleys and beaten, stabbed, and shot by white “ruffians”. Whites raided the black neighborhoods and shot people from their cars randomly, as well as threw rocks at their windows. In retaliation, African Americans mounted sniper ambushes and physically fought back. Despite the call to the Illinois militia to help the Chicago police on the fourth day, the rioting did not subside until the sixth day. Even then, thirty eight
Over the centuries, some leaders have believed that private citizens should rebel against injustice in a non-violent rebellion. These leaders have had courage and passion to start or encourage revelations; they have committed acts of civil disobedience to protest these laws put up by a corrupt government. The leaders were willing to give up their lives or freedom because their conscience would not let them rest and accept the unjust laws. Some of these leaders include Henry David Thoreau, the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Mahatma Gandhi, Aung San Suu Kyi, and Malala Yousafzai.
Peaceful protests was one of the ways African Americans tried to make a change. Many sit-ins occurred where whites and blacks would sit together integrated at white bars and refuse to move. By refusing to move many people through things such as ketchup, mustard, fries, milkshakes, vinegar, and everything on the counter. Mobs of people would harass them and even hurt them to try and get them to move. (Document 4) White cops would arrest those people sitting at the counter eventually, but they wouldn’t protect them from white violence. Police officers also used fire hoses and dogs on peaceful protesters showing that they would not protect African Americans. (Document 5) African Americans also started to integrate into schools. John Meredith
According to St. Augustine “an unjust law is not a law at all”(p186). This belief has been shared by many influential leaders in the past, including Henry Thoreau, Mahatma Ghandi, and Martin Luther King. They all believed in a non-violent approach to solving their social grievances. In most cases their approach was successful and was noticed by society and brought about a change in the laws. This nonviolent perspective stems straight from Jesus, who says, “Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you.”(p192). Others believe that by being disobedient you are under minding the laws and thus creating chaos within society. But, if unjust laws are not brought into light or under minded, then there will be no change in those laws. Martin Luther King felt there is a misconception of time in that the very flow of time cures all ills. On the contrary, time is neutral and it can be used either destructively or constructively(p190).
By definition, civil disobedience means to actively refuse to obey certain laws, demands, and commands of a government or of an occupying power without resorting to physical violence (Wikipedia 2007). Many of the influential people in history have felt passionately about what they believe. These passions caused them to rebel against a government or authority. Many times they felt so strongly about what they believed and how they were being treated was wrong they became disobedient. They would take physical and verbal abuse for being disobedient but would never retaliate. They believed in what they thought was wrong and tried to change the way they were governed. Albert Einstein once said 'never do anything against conscience even if the state demands it.' Albert Einstein's views seem to be reasonable. The claim by Albert Einstein is accurate because people should stand up for what they believe, they should know when they are right and their government is wrong, and they should trust in themselves and their own beliefs.
...all Riot and Its Aftermath." Stonewall 25: Cases 1-2. N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Mar. 2014.
Civil Disobedience Civil disobedience: “Refusal to obey civil laws in an effort to induce change in governmental policy or legislation, characterized by the use of passive resistance or other non-violent means” (Houghton, 2000). Although this definition seems broad enough to cover any aspect of a discussion, there is still much to be said about the subject. Martin Luther King wrote a fifty paragraph letter about the timeliness and wisdom in such an action, while Hannah Arendt managed to squeeze her definition into six (extra long) paragraphs regarding Denmark and the Jews.
From the Boston Tea Party of 1773, the Civil Rights Movement and the Pro-Life Movement of the 1960s, to the Tea Party Movement and Occupy Wall Street Movement of current times, “those struggling against unjust laws have engaged in acts of deliberate, open disobedience to government power to uphold higher principles regarding human rights and social justice” (DeForrest, 1998, p. 653) through nonviolent protests. Perhaps the most well-known of the non-violent protests are those associated with the Civil Rights movement. The movement was felt across the south, yet Birmingham, Alabama was known for its unequal treatment of blacks and became the focus of the Civil Rights Movement. Under the leadership of Martin Luther King Jr., president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, African-Americans in Birmingham, began daily demonstrations and sit-ins to protest discrimination at lunch counters and in public facilities. These demonstrations were organized to draw attention to the injustices in the city. The demonstrations resulted in the arrest of protesters, including Martin Luther King. After King was arrested in Birmingham for taking part in a peaceful march to draw attention to the way that African-Americans were being treated there, their lack of voter rights, and the extreme injustice they faced in Alabama he wrote his now famous “Letter from Birmingham.”
The year is 1989. Ronald Reagan has just been succeeded as president of the United States by George H.W. Bush. There is a certain smell lingering in the air, a certain aura of change and tension. The Berlin Wall has been destroyed, and the Soviet Union’s communist grip is beginning to loosen. Television news stations report that Exxon Valdez has spilled millions of gallons of oil into the sea in Alaska, giving the water’s surface a slick shine. This is a potentially devastating disaster for the animals that call the area home. However, far away in Georgia, something else is happening. Thousands of people have gathered in an arena, all packed together in the dark. The suspense is building; something is going to happen soon. Suddenly, the flickering of a projector can be heard, and thousands of people gaze towards the stage.
It was also a very emotional day on the internet with many media networks reporting on his Funeral. A few hours later, the protests commenced when a group of high schoolers from the nearby Frederick Douglass High School got into a tangle with Police Officers after they denied access to their transportation (Mondawmin Mall Transportation Hub).The upset teenagers took to the streets to protest. Over the next half an hour, a significant amount of more people joined, causing many news anchors to film the protest. At around 4:30, They arrived at a CVS store. The protesters then proceeded to start looting the convenience store, taking everything from medicine to food to toys. Then the protest took a violent turn when the looters started to set the store ablaze. The store went up in thick smoke, but because of the size, and aggression of the group, the Fire Department could not reach the store in
The protest poster ‘moms takes action against gun violence’ is protesting the fact that guns are allowed however kinder surprise eggs aren’t. The protest is put together by a group called moms take action. This group is simply saying that kinder surprises that kill 3 people globally each year are banned due to this in the interest of child safety, however guns that kill over 1500 kids each year are still fully legal. This applies to logos as it tries to discredit the logic behind there system.