trabalho de inglês desenvolvimento do Martin Luther King
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não sei se ta certo mas acho que é isso.
The gradual development of equality is a providential reality. Of this reality has the main characteristics: it is universal, it is durable, it escapes day by day to the human interference; all events as well as all men serve their development. Would it be prudent to imagine a social movement of such remote origins could be held for a generation? Can one conceive that, after having destroyed the feudal system and defeated the kings, will democracy now go back to the bourgeoisie and the wealthy class? Now that he has become so strong, and his adversaries so fragile, will he still stop? "- Alexis de Tocqueville - Democracy in America, 1835 After almost half a century of silent discontent, in the 1950s American blacks reacted again to the situation of inferiority and exclusion that the laws of whites condemned. They rose up against the discrimination and racial segregation they suffered in their country. Throughout the southern states of the United States there were still old racist laws that made them social outcasts, or a half-citizen. They summon us to serve in the army and fight in the wars, but they prevented us from voting and attending a public school with the other whites. They denied them lodging in the hotels and neither were they served.
The gradual development of equality is a providential reality. Of this reality has the main characteristics: it is universal, it is durable, it escapes day by day to the human interference; all events as well as all men serve their development. Would it be prudent to imagine a social movement of such remote origins could be held for a generation? Can one conceive that, after having destroyed the feudal system and defeated the kings, will democracy now go back to the bourgeoisie and the wealthy class? Now that he has become so strong, and his adversaries so fragile, will he still stop? "- Alexis de Tocqueville - Democracy in America, 1835 After almost half a century of silent discontent, in the 1950s American blacks reacted again to the situation of inferiority and exclusion that the laws of whites condemned. They rose up against the discrimination and racial segregation they suffered in their country. Throughout the southern states of the United States there were still old racist laws that made them social outcasts, or a half-citizen. They summon us to serve in the army and fight in the wars, but they prevented us from voting and attending a public school with the other whites. They denied them lodging in the hotels and neither were they served.
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