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Rosa Parks Research Paper

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The freedom of speech protects society from the basic human right to think and express themselves freely. It also puts a limit on the government and allows them to hear people’s opinions on various subjects. Being able to freely, and peacefully, express themselves positively impacts a free society. If the resistance was violent, then there would be a higher chance of a negative impact. Not abiding to the law is illegal, but if the law is unethical then the people should not have to abide to it. Throughout history there have been numerous amounts of peaceful protests and resistances. Rosa Parks was a major weighing factor in the boost of the racial issue in the 1950s. One of the laws, then was that African Americans could only sit in the back …show more content…

The bus driver had ordered four African Americans to move, “all but Parks acquiesced,” Parks was then arrested for her “act of civil disobedience” and for not abiding to the Jim Crow laws. But her peaceful protest of not moving to create a domino effect of a “381-day-long boycott” of not riding public busses led by Martin Luther King Jr. If she had not refused to move, the spark of African Americans fighting for their fights would not have happened. She did not use violence and overall created a positive impact on the society, especially to African Americans. Martin Luther King Jr. was another major pushing factor of the racial rights and was able to raise a series of protests. Even though MLK voiced for peaceful protests, there were also numerous people that violently protested which resulted in aggressive arrests and in some instances, death. But peaceful protests typically didn’t have as unfortunate of outcome as the violent ones did. Many posed the question of whether negotiation was a better path, but “this is the very purpose of direct action” it wasn’t to raise havoc among the public, it was to make a way to say to the government and the law that the way African Americans were being treated was …show more content…

Afterwards he was “exiled in Moscow” and is treated as a spy with years to serve in prison. Many believe that his peaceful resistance to the law was needed because the people should be able to have a choice in government made decisions. Others also state that the N.S.A.’s “entire mission” is to “intercept electronic communications,” so the people should assume that they have such advanced technology to keep the society safe. It is true that the National Security Agency’s job is to collect intelligence by surveying adversaries through phone-calls, e-mails, and Internet data. But what Snowden released didn’t put any of the top-secret government information to the public, what he did show us was that the government “routinely collects the phone logs” of millions of Americans who don’t even show any threat of terrorism. Also, that they can access “vast amounts of user data” from different Internet companies. Snowden’s peaceful resistance was able to show the people that the things they do privately, in reality, are not private

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