The civil liberties and the equalities for all the people of different religions and ethnic backgrounds were taking place during those sometimes violent years. The use of unconventional political action such as sit-ins, demonstrations, and marches was widely used by those who wanted to protest America's segregated law. Such acts were televised in order to demonstrate police brutality and injustice that people were experiencing in their own country. Eventually, it became illegal to segregate and to demonstrate racism and inequality bases on the color of the skin or religious preference. The unconventional political action worked, but it created a law by which people do not have a right to discriminate against others. This defeats any purpose of have a constitution that says "All men are created equal." It would have been more justifying for the American government to punish those who did not advocate the Constitution of the United States and who felt that segregation was necessary. Eventually, the civil liberties defeated segregation, but it was not successful in the sense that there is still racism in the United States. In other countries such as Great Britain and Australia, the race relations had less violence then those in the United States which is mostly because the governments acknowledgements that all citizens are …show more content…
Violence creates fear, and the fear of unknown subsequently results in direct conflict. Civil disobedience always played a major role in time and time again. It is a powerful tool of the masses that consequently results in a struggle between the governments and its idealistic citizens. The struggle for new social movements and new political ideas create hatred and spread fast among the people that make societies work. During the late 1960's and 1970's there was an increasing number of idealists who were defiant against governments because these groups of individuals were spread all over the world. This was a deferent intensification of struggle, whereas here it was the educated who participated in the unconventional political actions. These, sometimes violent protests, happened in universities all over the world and they targeted societies that had power and had freedoms. These unconventional actions were driven by different factors that ranged from economic and physical security to political values in the government. These were major changes from the beginning of the century, but the same tactics of the unconventional political actions were used in the process. Not only did the time changed the values of the unconventional political action it also demonstrated that individuals that are even poorly organized can instigate protests and create a source for demonstration in order to demonstrate