Martin Luther King Jr.: The Fight For Civil Rights

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American history has been changed dramatically due to peaceful protests and resistance of laws. From the very core of our founding as a country to even the most recent of issues, change cannot occur if no one decides to take a stand against lawful injustice. The colonists refused unfair taxes on products, Martin Luther King Jr. fought peacefully for the rights of African Americans, and even isolated issues such as the recent oil pipeline in North Dakota have reached ears across the country due to the actions of the peaceful trespassing of protesters.

The colonists that came from England to settle in this country created their own morals for how a government should be run. Many settled in the New World because they no longer wanted to be ruled by the British government, a system that was unfair to the lower classes. In America, the colonists created their own government that was meant to be a representation of the people: a democracy. The process of creating a democracy was arduous, and many violent protests and rebellions occurred. Yet there were some peaceful ones as
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became a prominent figure in the fight for Civil Rights. His protesting encouraged others to do the same, and there were multiple peaceful resistances of injustice during this time. The Montgomery Bus Boycott was peaceful, and Rosa Parks took a stand for African Americans but was arrested nonetheless. King himself was a major participant in many of these protests. He encouraged nonviolence, but the protests were met with violence from police forces all the same. King participated in marches, sit-ins, boycotts, and speeches, and he was arrested multiple times for his actions. He fought for the freedom and equality of African Americans in a manner that had great effect. It is my belief that if violence were used, nothing would have changed. Police and the government would have had more excuses to further disallow progress for African American