The American Dream is something that everybody strives to accomplish throughout their life no matter where they come from. Three people have strived to create the American Dream for other people and not just themselves. These people are Martin Luther King Jr, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Lucretia Mott. Martin Luther King Jr. wanted African Americans to achieve their american dream of being considered equal to whites in every aspect. Elizabeth Stanton and Lucretia Mott strived and rallied for women’s right in society. The segregation blacks felt was degrading and humiliating and Martin Luther King Jr. led them to the promise land to make a huge step towards ending segregation. Elizabeth Stanton and Lucretia Mott pushed the government hard to …show more content…
Lucretia Mott was an official delegate that was supposed to speak at the world anti-slavery convention in London but she was revoked from these privileges because she was a woman. This upset Mott but, it lit a fire in her when she met Elizabeth Stanton because she was a modern feminist. The both of them decided to write “The Declaration of Sentiments” because they wanted gender equality. They saw how many of the women's unalienable rights were taken away due to men thinking they were more important. Stanton and Mott admits, “She had no voice”(2). No man in the 1800s listened to anything women said because they were not important to society other than being a personal “slave” to men. This shows the lack of respect for all woman kind which gave Stanton and Mott even more drive to achieve their American Dream for all women. All women were good for was; cooking, cleaning, taking care of the children and cater to her husband. Men thought just because they worked and brought home money that women needed to take care of everything else. Stanton and Mott explain, “ She is compelled to promise obedience to her husband…” (2). If women were married their husband was in charge of her, She always had to answer to him. Men had complete control over their wives because men had power and, they had a voice in society. Men and women always had different rights, and women like Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott finally took a stand for what they believed