Civil Disobedience And Peaceful Resistance Essay

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I believe that civil disobedience and peaceful resistances positively impacts our society even with the consequences that are brought with it. I strongly agree that peaceful resistances positively impacts our society because peaceful resistances earn more recognition and deal more respect compared to a violent resistance. I believe that a peaceful resistance is far more superior than a violent resistance. Peaceful resistances are just as loud as a violent resistance and to do a peaceful resistance really shows respect to the outside world. Many people and authors experimented the aftermath of both nonviolent and violent resistances between the years of 1900 to 2003 and they saw a dramatic comparison that peaceful resistances are twice as likely …show more content…

On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks was on her way home and her usual routine would be to take the bus home and the bus appeared to be full. Rosa Parks then decided to take a seat just behind the “White Only” section of the bus. When a white man got onto the bus, the bus driver urged 4 African American passengers, including Rosa Parks, to give up their seat for the white man. Out of the 4 passengers, Rosa Parks was the only person to not stand up and move. She was arrested for civil disobedience and the violation of the Jim Crow Laws. Her arrest was the spark of a rebellion led by the famous activist, Martin Luther King Jr.. Her arrest led to a 381 rebel against public transportation in Alabama and a court case about the laws in Alabama that was taken up all the way up to the Supreme Court. Rosa Parks served up to 10 years in prison as a consequence but as a reward to her integrity, the discriminatory laws of Alabama were sanctioned as unconstitutional. Her successful peaceful resistance against the Jim Crow laws in the 1900s led to her being named “Mother of the civil rights movement” and she deserves that name with the work she has done to stop racial prejudice in her time