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The Modern Civil Rights Movement Began When Rosa Parks,

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The modern civil rights movement began when Rosa Parks, an African-American woman, was arrested for refusing to move to the back of the bus in Montgomery, Alabama (“Civil Rights”). Fighting for racial justice and equality is not something new, as many have been striving towards equality for centuries. Rosa Park, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, and Barack Obama are public figures who advocated or continue to advocate the ideology behind the civil rights movement. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. instilled the idea of equality through and actively advocated for it throughout his lifetime. One of his most famous accounts in history was his I Have a Dream Speech: I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will …show more content…

Second, BLM cannot fix the problems of the justice system. And third, BLM is killing more blacks than saving them. The first issue with the BLM movement is the agenda is at war with black husbands and fathers. When viewing the BLM’s website, you would expect to see a list of references to helping black men and boys, but that’s not the case. Under the section “Guiding Principles,” a list of twelve principles serve as a vision statement for what the group hopes to accomplish. Whenever you read the principles, you quickly notice that most of them have nothing to do with the issues facing the black community or the black men and boys that the group has used as the face of their campaign to gain national voice and attention. As you read the principles, you will not find a single reference to black men and boys, except for “trans brothers,” which are men who want to be considered women. There is one section that relates to women but not black men. Accordingly, a third of Americans familiar with Black Lives Matter say they do not understand the objectives of the movement (Horowitz). This statistic is reflective of Americans’ mass misunderstanding of the mission statement for the BLM campaign. There are many real problems with our justice system today, but BLM is not going to fix them. It is a blunt instrument, where precision tools are needed to make an impact by flinging selected incidents into

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