The Civil Rights Movement In The 1960's

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Using various speeches and letters by famous activist movement leaders and the Divine-Breen text, I will compare the ideas, language, and common characteristics of two protest movements from the 1960’s by arguing that the Civil Rights Movement was more effective to bring forth change in USA. Tension filled air between the protestors, many citizens, white and black, stood with signs hanging around their neck to support the Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown v. Board of Education ruling to desegregate the nation’s schools. Fighting against racism and the cold weather, protestors never ceased to pressure the government to intervene with the growing racism in public facilities. Setting the tone for the upcoming mood of protest in the 1960’s, the civil …show more content…

In the famous speech of Martin Luther King Jr., he mentioned that African Americans are “still sadly crippled by manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination” even after one hundred years since the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation (I Have a Dream, 1963). Then he called for action that “Now [was] the time to make real the promise of democracy” (King, 1963). These men and women wanted democracy so that each individual, despite their skin color, could hold the power to voice their opinion. This was especially important to the African Americans since they have been suffering under racisms for many years before. The dream of equality has been the dream of thousands of Africans that came before the time of Martin Luther King Jr. Similarly, the Student Movement desired individual control over one’s own life. As stated in the Port Huron speech, Tom Hayden mentioned that this society “[sought] the establishment of a democracy of individual participation” (Port Huron Statement of the SDS, 1962). Tired of new bureaucracies, SDS wanted something called participatory democracy. Participatory democracy means that the individual citizen engages in political decisions and policies that affect their lives (Dictionary.com). This idea surmised the breaking of different socioeconomic status barriers and encouraged all types of citizen work together to accomplish modification at a local level. It is even evident in the name of SDS itself; Students for a Democratic Society. Through an active utilization of participatory democracy, SDS sought to abolish racism and violence in the American

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