The United States has faced lots of challenges regarding Civil Rights. Many still need to be fixed. The Civil Rights Movement started in 1954 and was the largest movement for people of color to fight for equal rights and to end segregation. Nearly 70 years later, significant issues regarding Civil Rights still need to be achieved—specifically economic discrimination, the justice system, and the unequal voting system. The hope for Civil Rights for people of color has been deferred, and we still have lots to work on. Economics is a large widescale issue that has been a problem around the world. African Americans have been discriminated economically against ever since slavery was abolished. In Martin Luthe King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech mentions …show more content…
But many people are still faced with challenges when it comes to the voting system. All U.S. citizens were allowed to vote in 1920, but many feel that there were many obstacles being added preventing their ability to vote. In Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, he says, “We cannot be satisfied as long as the Negro in Mississippi cannot vote and the Negro in New York believes he has nothing for which to vote.” This quote explains how even though people of color had the right to vote it was so highly discouraged that it felt as if they didn't have the right to. This is an issue today as well, as many voting polls are getting removed from Black neighborhoods and some political leaders are introducing ideas to help stop “rigged” elections from happening by hoping to eliminate the mail-in ballot system. Not only making it hade for the people of color to get their voices heard but also making it more difficult for the voters who can't take time out of their day to vote. The second part of the quote explains how African Americans were and are still not represented very well in political stances. This idea is also represented in the “Women in the Civil Rights Movement” article. This article talks about women facing both racism and sexism during the Civil Rights Movement. The article states, “She was shot at age 39 while transporting freedom marchers in Alabama.” This quote shows how many white people wanted to inflict fear on other African Americans of the possibility of violence that could happen by them going to the polls to go vote. This created the obstacle of fear for people of color that presented many fom having their voices heard ad represented. Many African Americans did not feel represented o heard in the government then and now. Voting systems still point more in a white person's direction than a person of