This study will ask the question, how has the #BLACKLIVESMATTER movement affected your perception of police officers? The major hypothesis that will be tested is that the #BLACKLIVESMATTER movement has had no effect on how Black & Latino college students view on police officers. This hypothesis depends on the notion that the #BLACKLIVESMATTER movement has not negatively or positively affected these young college students. This hypothesis takes into account the race and ethnicity of each student as well as their age group. This study approaches the hypothesis by isolating the effects of the movement on the students from any social or economic situation that the student may living in.
For example, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 came forth because of several movements like the Gay Rights Movement, Feminist Movement, and the Civil Rights Movement. These movements caused a lot of turbulence in the country because while one group thought we were moving forward, another group thought we were moving back. This caused chaos in the country, leading to backlash from our own government who should be for the people. Out of all the movements from the 1960s and 70s though, the Black Panther Party had the harshest response from the government. The Black Panther movement came up after the assassination of Malcolm X to fight against police brutality and defend the African American community in West Oakland, California.
There was a time in which the minorities within America began to emerge up from the trench of inequality and injustice, and that is when the civil rights movements came in existence. The sole purpose for these protest movements was to restore their basic rights as U.S citizen, getting recognized as equal under the eyes of law. However, in spite of enactments of many civil right laws, using various tactics and strategies and substantial amount of toil and struggle, not all of those movements were successful in achieving their aims. Only few movements were able to acquire their objectives. Starting off from first most significant movement of the 90s, the civil rights movement of African Americans, outnumbering other minorities in America.
Racial segregation was a major issue that alarmed the black community in the 1960s. Martin Luther King could not just sit and watch his own race get discriminated any longer; he was a well-known peaceful leader who led the black community in nonviolent protests. He was the voice of the discriminated, and stood up for the injustice thrown to his race. Being a Baptist minister, he could only peacefully evoke the idea of equality and unity among the races by communicating and marching. With his influences, thousands of African Americans stood by his side to form a nonviolent resistance towards segregation.
On October 1st I was was fortunate enough to attend the Morgan Lecture: “Intersectionality, Black Youth and Political Activism” with speaker Patricia Hill Collins. I would like to touch upon a few of the points Collins raised in regards to black activism during the event and connect these points to Robin D.G. Kelly's “Looking for the 'Real' Nigga: Social scientists construct the Ghetto.” The message within Kelly's essay of reshaping the caricature given to black culture by social scientists can be closely related to Collins message about avoiding the caricature often given to those who participate in black activism. Both Collins and Kelly seem to have the similar goal of disrupting the story often perceived within the realms of black culture
Poor People’s Campaign In the last year of his life, King actively expanded the scope of his efforts to include not only civil rights issues but also human rights issues important to people the world over. As the war in Vietnam escalated in the second half of the 1960s, King grew dissatisfied with the situation. In 1967 he began to speak out consistently against the war. In speeches and rallies around the country, he called for a negotiated settlement.
Itoro Okokon The NAACP is one of the most known civil right organizations in America and as a whole, it has impacted many of the events in American history. There are many factors that have allowed them to succeed in their endeavors, such as their values and norms and overall culture. They strongly mirror a bureaucracy because they contain an executive board that include many positions seen in governments.
The Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s and the Black Lives Matter Movement of the 21st century are both social justice movements aimed at ending racial discrimination and promoting equality. While these movements share some similarities, they also differ in their goals, strategies, and the political climate in which they operate. This essay will argue that the Civil Rights Movement and the Black Lives Matter Movement are different in their goals, strategies, and political contexts. Firstly, the goals of the Civil Rights Movement and the Black Lives Matter Movement are different.
Black lives matter movement should also argue, stop black on black crime. There are lots of violence going on today, particularly within our own community. We have young black men killing each other over drugs and other nonsense that may torment our community. Not to mention, the constant reminder of the black on black crime that is plastered on the news daily. It saddens me to know our ancestors endured so much hardship and we turn around and kill one another.
The Civil Rights Movement, 1964 and 1965 to be exact, where President Lyndon B. Johnson took his pen and added the presidential signature to the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which would then, was the answer to the protest against racial disenfranchisement. Now here we are, 50 years down the road, the same issues remain. This goes into the old saying, “with every reaction on your part comes an overreaction from another.” When one law changed, so did another, making sentences harsher and more penalizing. We cannot complain that our Black citizens are not getting out, voting, when they are directly affected by disenfranchisement in America.
The civil rights movement was a significant struggle for African-Americans in the mid- 20th century, consisting various social movements to bring about change, end racial discrimination and ultimately gain rights equivalent to those of whites. Albeit there were many enactments that asserted the rights of blacks throughout the epoch, as it was evident and still is today, laws cannot force society to change their view on people and it solely suppressed the racial attitudes that existed. The Watts Riots were a turning point in the civil rights movement because it challenged the non-violent philosophy, converted it from this idea of gaining rights to economics in the ghettos and contributed to white backlash. The Second Great Migration and
Throughout the decades during the civil rights movement there have been many protests where people would resist the higher power. They would resist because the higher power would create laws that denied basic human rights to blacks leading all the way back to slavery. Martin Luther King Jr. a prominent leader in the movement would coordinate boycotts and marches. He resisted in multiple ways, which would lead to long term and immediate affects including death and sever injuries, but though all that Martin Luther King Jr. would show resilience and courage no matter how many threats and violent acts upon him he would receive.
Black Lives Matter is an activist movement in the United States. This movement began in 2013 after George Zimmerman shooting of a young black teen, Trayvon Martin. Black Lives Matter primarily protest against what is calls “police brutality” in the united states. They have protested against many African American deaths by the hands of police. Media organizations today refer to them as “a new civil rights movement”.
Urban Injustice: How Ghettos Happen, explains that the gap between the rich and the poor in the United States is greater than it has been in thirty years (Hilfiker & Edelman, 2002). Furthermore, every forty three seconds, a child is born into poverty (Hilfiker & Edelman, 2002, p. IX). Those citizens most affected by these realities are African Americans (Hilfiker, 2002). These people face unique hardships and oppression as compared to the rest of the population. A 1990 survey of non-black respondents found that sixty five percent of those surveyed believed that blacks were lazier than other races.
Introduction The story of the Civil Rights Movements of African Americans in America is an important story that many people knew, especially because of the leadership Martin Luther King Jr. Black people in America, between 1945 and 1970 had to fight for rights because they had been segregated by white people, they didn’t have equal laws compared to white people. So they initiated the Civil Rights Movements to fight for getting equal civil rights.