So many courageous people fought for some kind of freedom. For example, in 1775, colonists during the American Revolution fought for their independence from Great Britain, and in 1865, slaves had to fight for their freedom too. These freedoms could be something as simple as being able to go to a friend's house, or it could be as serious as same-sex marriage. No matter how big or small the issue is, freedom must be repeatedly won by each generation. When King George III made the colonists pay taxes, they were furious. They formed a plan to obtain their independence. They knew what they needed, so they went and got it. Over 4,000 people died trying to win their independence in the American Revolution, and when they did, they fabricated …show more content…
This realization started the Civil War between the Union and the Confederacy. About 620,000 soldiers perished fighting for what they believed in regarding slavery. The Civil War ended in 1865, giving slaves equal rights and an improved quality of life without limitations. The Civil War showed citizens that in order to obtain something, you have to put forth enough effort. Everybody has their own individual thinking when it comes to freedom. When a law is passed, not everybody is going to agree to it. Then people begin to do things like protests to fight for what their meaning of freedom is. During 2015, citizens fought for their right to be able to have same-sex marriage. Many people united to fight for what they believed in, and they got it. Some individuals say that freedom should be certain once it is already conquered because of the risks that could affect citizens, however fighting for a certain freedom teaches a large number of valuable lessons. If each generation fought for freedom, they would learn how to respect it. They would learn not to take it for granted. These lessons can make the world a finer place for everybody. As civil rights activist, Coretta Scott King, says, "Freedom is never really won, you earn it and win it in every
“We hold our heads high, despite the price we have paid, because freedom is priceless.” - Lech Walesa. Freedom - the power or right to act, speak, or think as one wants without hindrance or restraint. Such a small definition for a word with so much meaning. This miniscule word has inspired people and even started wars.This topic is rarely regarded; even though we would certainly know if someone took our freedom from us.
People take freedom for granted, one should not have to die trying to earn freedom, because it should come naturally to any natural born citizens. Freedom should not be unequaled by others. Freedom is having all your rights. No one should feel like they aren’t as important as
The Civil War is still to do this day the bloodiest battle the United States has been a part of. Over the period of the 4 years it was fought, more than 800,000 white men were killed. This number does not include the blacks, women or children that were killed or the number of men that were injured or were never recovered. This war between the Confederate Army and the Union had one cause, to keep slavery in the south. Although the Union eventually won this battle, it did not completely free and eliminate slavery because of Black Codes and the Sharecropping system being enacted as well as the formation of discriminatory groups like the KKK. It did, however, eliminate the Confederate states which were readmitted into the Union as free, and formed the Freedman's Bureau which helped freedmen ease into society.
“You have brains in your head and feet in your shoes, you can steer yourself in any direction you choose!”~Dr.Seuss. Today my generation has been given the chance to have freedom. Why you ask? This is because America went through a lot of arguing and fighting to get where we are today. I have been given the chance of a lifetime, to be in a world that I can be what I want and make decisions of my own. When I think of freedom I think of people who have chosen to fight for us and stand up for what is right.
Coretta Scott King, a civil rights activist, once said “Freedom is never really won, you earn it and win it in every generation.” I agree with King; freedom must be won repeatedly.
The Civil War is a war that was fought in the United States from 1861 to 1865. The war was between the Union consisting of 23 free states and the Confederate comprising of 11 southern states, and 5 border states.
To conclude my essay, if we wanted freedom so much, we would work forward to it. We have always had issues in history, but it seems like we haven’t learned our lesson from the past. The people of this earth are always fighting because they always are wanting more than what they have and if freedom is what you want, then we need to stick with that and make sure we have is what we want from this
When the American Civil War broke out amongst the divided entities that encumbered the United States during the 19th century an explosion of turmoil and struggle reigned free throughout the nation. Furthermore, with the strife of the Civil War came a barrage of changes that wracked much of the infant nation to its core. Traveling from end to end of the United States the effects of American Civil War became the precedent for the future of the nation. The war, for its influence on the people of the U.S, became a symbol for a turning point in American history. Cemented in that history is a conception of the war that has remained over the many years since its culmination. The idea that the Civil War was a war of rules and regulations and therefore is synonymous with the notion of battles being fought with troops lining either side of an open field and exchanging fire until one stood no more. Often this interpretation of the war is used to personify the idea of glorification of the ferocity of battles, paying homage to brave soldiers who fought in them, and telling of the birth of a refined nation through insurmountable suffering and evoke an attitude of awe towards the scale of conflict the Civil War provided. However there are some whose accounts allow us to look at the American Civil War in a different light, a light that paints a different picture of battles for those caught amongst the struggle but yet still envelop similar attitudes towards the war. This different style
"Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; It must be demanded by the oppressed"-Martin Luther King Jr. There are two different approaches to achieve freedom. The first approach is that you only have to fight for freedom once. On other hand, another approach to gain freedom is to fight repeatedly for it. Sometimes when freedom is given, it does not give every right a person should have. An example, of this is seen in the Civil Rights Movement, when the Africans Americans and women fought for their freedom. They had to continously fight for equal rights among white men.
Freedom can be seen throughout Dr. King's speech ¨I Have a Dream¨. In lines 127-140, King uses the repetition of the phrase ¨Let freedom ring...¨ from the song ¨My Country ´Tis of Thee”. This makes the speech encouraging for the crowd that went to hear Dr. King preach. Not only it encourages the crowd to fight for what's right, but it also helps remind America
The first reason why I believe that freedom has to be won repeatedly is because of history. For example, when blacks were first brought to America, they were in taken in as slaves. They had no freedom whatsoever: they were told when to sleep, when to wake up, when to eat, and when to work. Then someone with the power to change that did. This man was Abraham Lincoln. Although blacks were no longer slaves to man, they were still slaves to illiteracy and gullibility. They were free, but they didn't have an education, which lead them to be very gullible and easy to deceive. They didn't know how they were supposed
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same -Ronald Reagan, 40th President of the Terran Nation "United States of America"
What do you think of when you hear the word “freedom”? When I hear “freedom”, I think of the year 1776. I think of that year because that’s the year when we won our freedom and became a new free nation from Britain. I think that once we’ve won our freedom, we shouldn’t have to continue fighting. It should be permanent. Everyone should be created equal, even if you are a different race. We are human, so we all need to be equal. We proved ourselves to Britain that we could have freedom and independence by winning against them.
The American Civil War started in 1861 and ended in 1865. The two sides of the war are the Union (North) and Confederacy (South). The South wanted to keep slavery to maintain their economy, but after the North realized how badly the slaves were being treated, the war became the only answer. Around 620,000 people died in the war. Both
“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free”.Ronald Reagan 40th president of US (1911 - 2004). Does freedom need to be won more than once? This was the question that was presented to me. And yes, I do come to the understanding that freedom does need to be won more than once. There are many viable reasons to which I believe this such as; There’s always something new that appears as people evolve and become more intelligent and more civilized, different people come upon different things that they believe need to be resolved, and each generation is able to see new affairs that they want to eliminate. So in my opinion, freedom does need to be won more than once.