ipl-logo

Equal Rights Dbq

1066 Words5 Pages

A constant battle has been going on to fight for the legal rights of equality of the sexes because of the countless times Americans were discriminated because of their sex. Women would have the greatest issue with the discrimination they faced in their daily lives and would find their own ways of addressing this issue, like the National Women’s political party that was formed in 1923. On March 22, 1972, the attempt to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment was was sent to the states for ratification. The amendment needed 38 states to approve its ratification, but only had convinced 35 states. The Equal Right Amendment (ERA) was a proposed amendment that wanted to guarantee equal legal rights for all American citizens. Section 1 of the amendment …show more content…

The rights that are stated in the U.S. Constitution mainly emphasize their attention on men as the ones in power who have the rights to make decisions and hold office. Although the rights of women have greatly expanded throughout the last few decades, women have never fully been seen as equals to men. The purpose of Title IX of the Education Amendments was based on similar wants as the ERA since this amendment wanted to prohibit discrimination based on your sex “under any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance” (Document 11). Eventually this amendment was passed in 1972 by Congress as they got the approval of enough states to pass it. Now, the question at hand was how far did they want to take the equality of sexes in American, how much power do they want to give …show more content…

Bush and become law in 1990. The act was a civil rights law that was against discrimination towards individuals with disabilities that varied from being blind, having a severe disfigurement, or having cancer. These individuals would no longer be treated differently in areas of public life, including jobs, schools, transportation areas, and any other area open to the general public. Being disabled ranged from mental to physical illnesses that were not socially accepted for many years. This is simply due to people not accepting others to be anything different from their perception of what an American should and should not be. Instantly, disabled Americans were labeled as different from everyone else, “less American” than everyone else. The main issue was that no one knew how to help accommodate the lives of disabled so that they could have the equal and fair right that were granted to them when they came to America. The process of protecting the disabled has taken so long because of the social rejection Americans have towards them, because even after the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the disabled were still segregated and discriminated. In the remarks President George H.W. Bush made on the day of the signing of the ADA, he explained how he believed that American have “a sacred duty to ensure that every other American's rights are also guaranteed” in America so that a brighter future with

Open Document