From the first inauguration of George Washington as our President to Martin Luther King’s famous “I Have a Dream Speech” and the 19th amendment for women’s rights, a variety of crowds in America have faced the battle for freedom. Although society has reformed in many ways with our civil rights, subtext prejudices have remained. One example of those biases is that people in poverty tend to not be invited in a higher class neighborhood, so to speak. Or the outlook, or appearances, of a person can be mocked in a society so bent on achieving perfection in looks. With that being said, people have to push past certain boundaries of society in order to have equal admiration or judgment bestowed upon them. If I were to analyze this present society with a historical outlook, I would say that the public has only changed the point of view of the battle, not the rules or even the prize:
From the first inauguration of George Washington as our President to Martin Luther King’s famous “I Have a Dream Speech” and the 19th amendment for women’s rights, a variety of crowds in America have faced the battle for freedom. Although society has reformed in many ways with our civil rights, subtext prejudices have remained. One example of those biases is that people in poverty tend to not be invited in a higher class neighborhood, so to speak. Or the outlook, or appearances, of a person can be mocked in a society so bent on achieving perfection in looks. With that being said, people have to push past certain boundaries of society in order to have equal admiration or judgment bestowed upon them. If I were to analyze this present society with a historical outlook, I would say that the public has only changed the point of view of the battle, not the rules or even the prize: