An Equal Voice in a Democracy When a young child learns how to speak the conversation is usually repetitive. The repetition can be words that are heard often, such as “mom” or “dad”; children all over the world start with a reiterate type of speech. However, as children go through life they develop a voice. In select countries their voice is kept silent through the specific types of governments. In more extreme government systems, the thoughts of children are controlled to the extent that they never establish a voice of their own. In a democratic society, certain rights are granted at birth and the freedom of speech is open to anyone regardless of race, sexuality, or gender. Civil disobedience and protest exist in a democratic society to give everyone an equal voice. Civil disobedience and protest, in a democratic society, ultimately provided an equal voice in the Civil Rights Movement. Multiple African American activists conveyed the freedom of speech in their arguments, one of those speakers being Rosa Parks. Rosa Parks may have been deemed unequal by the American society in the 1950s, nevertheless she knew her voice was valid. In 1955, according to history.com, Rosa parks defied a southern law and refused to give her spot on the bus to a white man. The …show more content…
philosophized that nonviolent protests and civil disobedience would result in civil equality, as similarly stated by History.com. Henceforth, he articulated his arguments peacefully through the use of words. For instance, on the 28th of August in 1963, King gave a speech that pleaded with America to give the real promises of a democracy, as claimed by Kingencyclopedia.stanford.edu. In his speech he famously states the words “I have a dream.” These words influenced the democratic society that people are accustomed to today. Although King was fighting because he wanted equality for all, King also demonstrated that even the smallest minority could have a voice in a corrupt