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    Fighting for Equal Rights Jane Addams‚ Harriet Tubman‚ Elizabeth Cady Stanton‚ and Rachel Carson were four American women who advocated for social change. Their courage‚ intelligence‚ strength and leadership made a positive difference in the lives of many people. These women were pioneers in their times. They either helped to found‚ or lent their voices to‚ various social movements‚ policies‚ and causes that evolved during their lifetimes and proved successful in helping many oppressed people.

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    enough organized that they had no choice than to be recognized by the opposite sex. These organizations blossomed from the abolitionist movement‚ which encouraged the participation of women in an effort to free the slaves. In July of 1848‚ Elizabeth Stanton and Lucretia Mott‚ two social activists‚ held a convention on women’s rights in Seneca Falls‚ New York. Over three hundred people attended the event‚ which spanned two days. It consisted of lectures and discussions on the social‚ economical‚ religious

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    was able to acknowledge those with minimal education and was able to put in simpler terms what the intentions of the essay were. Jefferson’s strategic writings have remained effective throughout this countries history. On the other hand Elizabeth Stanton‚ was

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    religion‚ or nationality (Stanton). Symbolization is the second stage; the target group is given names or symbols to the classifications. Whether the symbols are wanted or not‚ it is still considered universally humane (Stanton). Next‚ in the dehumanization stage‚ one group intentionally denies the humanity of the other group. The target group is equated with animals‚ vermin‚ or diseases. It is typical for hate propaganda to be used in vilifying the victims (Stanton). The fourth stage‚ organization

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    When she was alive during the 1800s‚ women could not vote‚ attend college‚ and were expected to stay at home and cook‚ clean‚ and care for their children. Anthony did not agree with any of this‚ so she‚ along with Elizabeth Cady Stanton‚ another woman at the front of the women’s rights movement‚ formed the National Woman’s Suffrage Association (Johnson Lewis). The goal of this organization was to pass an amendment giving women the right to vote. Anthony later became president of

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    From then on‚ those women who were mistreated took on an idea of holding a women’s convention that discussed the mistreatments of women. During the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 Elizabeth Cady Stanton created the Declaration of Sentiments which was a document that was much similar to the Declaration of Independence but in which discussed about the exercising rights of the women. As a result of the convention‚ over one hundred men and women signed

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    being the “lesser sex” in a working world. Elizabeth Cady Stanton‚ who became a major advocate for the women’s movement‚ learned her lesson by listening to the complaints of women in her father’s office. When explaining it to her father‚ she stated‚ “They who have sympathy and imagination to make the sorrows of others their own‚ can readily learn all the hard lessons of life from the experiences of others.” In 1848‚ Elizabeth Cady Stanton and other female leaders had the first women’s convention

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    So‚ the purpose of Seneca Falls Convention was to bring the issue of woman suffrage into a national issue in order to show how woman were treated unequally. The Seneca Falls Convention was was organized by the Stanton and her friend Lucretia Mott in 1948‚ where they brought and introduced the declaration of Rights and Sentiments that was wrote based on the declaration of Independence. Which declared “Equality for women and‚ more specifically‚ that women should

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    However‚ that was easier said than done. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott were the driving forces behind the convention at Seneca Falls‚ and they were eager and ready to fight for‚ and institute‚ the drastic changes it would take to achieve total equality with their male counterparts‚ but at the time‚

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    target civilians or restraining regular military forces and militia forces from attacking civilians. Stanton believes that if a militia is recruited from a community then they are less likely to attack the civilian community that they came from. Stantion found that “Militia forces rarely use higher levels of civilian targeting than their government counter parts. The evidence does not support the Stanton

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