The man that refused to give up his seat 4 years before Rosa Parks

655 Views | 4 Replies | Last: 3 mo ago by Johnny Bear
Tempus Edax Rerum
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https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/this-little-known-civil-rights-activist-refused-to-give-up-his-bus-seat-four-years-before-rosa-parks-did-180984742/
KaiBear
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Tempus Edax Rerum said:

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/this-little-known-civil-rights-activist-refused-to-give-up-his-bus-seat-four-years-before-rosa-parks-did-180984742/


Mao would have simply executed the man along with 3 entire generations of his relations. Case closed.

Stalin would have execute him and sent 3 generations to a Siberia gulag where half of them would have died from malnutrition and expose. Case closed.

However the freedoms , justice and sense of fairness established by the Founding Fathers provided the avenues with which an American could fight back against injustice.


Those avenues have been severely weakened under the current version of the Democrat Party .

Lawfare is now the norm.

Under a Harris administration lawfare will be even more rampant.
Harrison Bergeron
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"Rosa Parks" was always a planned stunt ... another convenient fact they do not share. It was not organic. Still just, but her story is fabricated.
Realitybites
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The success of nonviolent resistance depends on the audience being Christian in a representative government. As was observed above, in other systems they merely disappear...into the mouths of lions. Ovens, gulags...or in the case of modern Democrats, prison after lawfare strips them of their assets.
Johnny Bear
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Harrison Bergeron said:

"Rosa Parks" was always a planned stunt ... another convenient fact they do not share. It was not organic. Still just, but her story is fabricated.

Whether it was a planned stunt or not, what Rosa Parks did was a bold courageous act of defiance against the unfair and unjust systemically accepted segregation practices that existed at that point in history. The generally accepted myth about her is that she was the first black person to ever publicly commit such an act when the truth is she was just the first black person to get widely noticed and publicized for doing so. Still makes her an important person in the history of the civil rights movement, but not the first activist to commit an act of defiance.
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