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    The LGBT Movement

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    The LGBT Movement America has always been known as the “Land of the Free and Home of the Brave”. Unfortunately‚ our country has not let everyone be the “free”‚ authentic self that they deserve to be. Unlike race‚ religion‚ gender and age‚ sexual orientation is not a characteristic under civil rights laws. Homosexuals have faced relentless hostility and discrimination for centuries and have been on an uphill battle for equality. It wasn’t until the Stonewall Inn Riots in 1969 that a political

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    raised. If the country was founded on democratic and free ideals‚ then why were some groups being excluded while others were being favored? This question is especially pertinent to the women’s rights and abolitionist movements that started in the early nineteenth century. These movements proved that people could have a voice in government‚ but‚ ironically‚ women and abolitionist leaders were speaking up to protest their limited political rights and to press for equal opportunities. Despite the vote

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    The double movement concept can be difficult to understand within the new global economy because most consider markets and social life to be separate‚ but they are not. As Polanyi explains‚ “[Individuals do] not act so as to safeguard [their] individual interest in the possession of material goods; [they] acts so as to safeguard [their] social standing‚ [their] social claims‚ [their] social assets.” (Polanyi [year]:48) To understand how this affects the everyday individual‚ one must consider that

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    Reform Movements

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    Reform Movements During the 19th Century there were many reform movements that took place. Reform movements were movements that were organized to reform or change the certain way of things. Reform movements did not always work but the ones that did greatly changed the way our nation operates today. There were three major reform movements that have altered the nation; the abolitionist movement‚ the temperance movement and the women ’s suffrage movement. Without these movements‚ and the great leaders

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    Reform Movements

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    and 1850‚ the United States was undergoing a series of reform movements. At the same time‚ America was rapidly growing and diversifying. Movements were designed to adapt to the new‚ bigger nation. They inspired the creation of new institutions as well. Americans had different feelings about their expanding nation. Some welcomed the changes‚ excited about the growth. Others became worried about the future of America. The reform movements came as a result of these different feelings. On the surface

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    The Goddess Movement When in 1974 respected archaeologist Marija Gimbutas published The Goddess and Gods of Old Europe (Berkeley: University of California Press)‚ little did she know the effect it would have on feminism‚ religion and society. Her book was about the spiritual practices of people living in southeastern Europe 6000 to 8000 years ago. Her book presented a theory of matriarchal and matrilineal societies that in many ways were ideal. Men and women lived in harmony‚ women ran the temples

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    side he stood on. On June 11 he spoke about his personal endorsement of the civil rights activism. He spoke about how the world must view them and how could they say that this land is free for everybody but “negroes”? This shows that a lot of the movement was done not due exactly to pity towards the blacks but due to their humiliation in regards to the rest of the world and this issue. After this speech Kennedy asked Congress for a broad law that would ensure voting rights‚

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    The Communist Movement

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    “Every form of society has been based‚ as we have already seen‚ on the antagonism of oppressing and oppressed classes.”1 It is from this class antagonism that the communist movement tried to break away from. Karl Marx saw the proletariat as the most oppressed class and in his efforts to remedy this‚ the idea of communism was born. In the beginning it was the feudal lords who owned the land that subjugated the serfs. When the feudal system crumpled and fell it was the bourgeois who picked up the

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    The Abolitionist Movement

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    talking about abolitionist movement and its effect on united states. Before I talk more about abolitionist movement‚ I will explain what abolitionist movement was about. According to dictionary.com‚ the Abolitionist movement which was known as the anti slavery movement made attempts from 1830s and 1870s in the South. The American antislavery movement began in the 1820s and was sustained over 4 decades by organizations‚ publications. The goals of this Abolitionist movement were to free slaves and end

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    The Negro Movement

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    far the African American culture has come. The progression of the African American culture is indeed one to be proud of. From cotton fields to Harlem‚ “The New Negro Movement”‚ sparked a sense of cultural self-determination‚ with a yearning to strive for economic‚ political equality‚ and civic participation. This was a movement that sparked a wide range of advancements in the African American culture. Leaving footprints of great individuals as well as set a path way for future generations to

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