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Women's Rights In The 20th Century

Decent Essays

Throughout history, political and social life were all controlled and regulated by men. As a result women often lived their life in silence and were banned from participating in their society. However, from the start of the 20th century, this cycle of white male dominance was quickly challenged by various minority groups. The Women’s Rights Movement, Gay Liberation Movement, and the African-American Civil Rights Movement to name a few all demanded basic human rights and to be treated equally as their straight white male counterpart. In 1977, Harvey Milk, a gay rights activist, became the first openly gay person to be elected to public office in California (he won a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors). About year later, on June 25, 1978, he gave a powerful speech on the steps of the San Francisco City Hall demanding equality not only for the LGBTQ community but for everyone. Similarly, on September 5, 1995, Hillary Clinton, the First Lady at the time, transformed the world as she delivered a moving speech on women’s rights. It was at the U.N 4th World Conference On Women, where she uttered the famous line, “Let it be that human rights are women’s rights and women’s rights are …show more content…

By having the world just stop judging people because you are a women or because you are gay, then we can come together and fight for something we all have in common, a better future where everyone is equal. In Hillary Clinton’s speech, she says, “We must move beyond recognition of problems to working together, to have the common effort to build that common ground we hope to see. She appeals to our logos by stating that nothing can be solved if we just acknowledge our problems. Furthermore, she declares that we must appreciate and make use of our differences to unite as one to build a future where everyone has an equal opportunity to make a

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