Civil rights
If it weren't for the past, where would we be today? If it wasn't for the trials and tribulations of are ancestors would we have our freedom? These questions could be answered with a simple yes or no, but the eyes of most people it means hope, hope for a life of equal opportunities as any other race. Through the course of time African Americans have made positive changes for a better world today. Take the bus boycott of Montgomery, Alabama for instance, a group of African Americans united together for their right not to sit on the back of the bus and now we can sit where we want. Also the situation at Central High school in Little Rock, Arkansas when nine African Americans students attempted and succeeded in attending an all white school to get a better education and now we can go to school where we want. Or the Voting Rights Movement in Selma, Alabama and the march over the Edmund Pettis Bridge now we can vote and the age of 18 and it doesn't matter what race you are. Throug!hout the years the ways of the human race have made a dramatic changed in to the world we all know today. The past has accumulated many positive changes, and if it wasn't for the negatives their would be no room the positive aspects. Now, African America
The nine consisted of Minnijean Brown, Elizabeth Eckford, Ernest Green, Thelma Mothershed, Melba Patillo, Gloria Ray, Terrence Roberts, Jefferson Thomas, and Corlotta Walls. It is based on first-come first-serve seating, but it wasn't always this simple. Taking a stand for what they knew was right. Instead !of the Little Rock nine going and following the path of quitting, and went where there was no path and left a trail. It doesn't matter how long it took us to get our freedom, but it is how we did it that makes it stands out like a red apple sitting on a pile of yellow lemons. And now Central High School is 90% African American. Although most African Americans tend to sit on the back of the bus, but that is their choice. More than half of the things that we do today were never imagined 60 years ago. In March of 1965 after church people went in paired lines and begun to march for the right to vote. The flyer told them about Rosa Parks and in order to make a change they need to pull together and get their voices heard. Today any and everyone who decides to take public transportation are allowed to sit wh!ere they want. It's like the saying goes " People forget how fast you did a job- but they remember how well you did it". Bloody Sunday a time a grief and pain, but also a time showing courage and strength. A train that others may now take to get to a better education. ns can sit wherever they want on a bus.
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