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Nelson's Body And Soul: The Black Panther Movement

669 Words3 Pages

Through the steady injustices of the United States' health care system, people have been neglected from good medical care. The health care system has failed to give equal medical attention to all races, gender, income statuses, and sexual orientation. People are furious of their mistreatment and demand to see these injustices vanish from our country. Citizens of every state have gathered to form rallies and marches to protest their rights as human beings, in hopes of government officials to hear their pleas. Protests and marches have not only existed in today's times, but it has been persistent since the seventies. Men and women in the seventies have been the pioneers of urging the importance of equal rights for everyone. Unfortunately, their …show more content…

In the 1960s-70s, the Black Panther Movement fought through protests and rallies for the rights of African Americans and other minorities to have proper health care. The Black Panthers fought against medical discrimination with free medical clinics that took care people's basic medical needs and tested them for sickle-cell anemia. The development of this movement set stone for other minorities to also have free health care. Indeed, the improvements of the Black Panther's still are prominent in today's time. However, there is still racism in health care that is affecting people from receiving equal health care rights. Bettina Judd, is a present-day poet who is protesting the way our health care is through words in her poems. In her poems, she expresses not having a voice to fight against the inequalities that minorities face in health care. Her poem, In 2006 I Had an Ordeal with Medicine, she writes about how having been found guilty because of her bloodline. Judd is a black woman who receives unequal care because of her intersectionality. I think when she uses the term 'bloodline' she is referring to her the inequality that is passed onto each of her family members. She did not choose what bloodline she was born into, but she writes about how that shouldn’t disqualify her from receiving proper health care. Health care treats minorities with unsuitable medical care compared to white

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