Kennedy’s Inaugural Address and from Letter from Birmingham City Jail. These two documents are very influential towards many different freedoms. This is because they are telling what they believe the many freedoms should be for the poor. They believe that the poor and the needy deserve the same amount of freedoms. Many people argue that this is already done, but if he or she looks closer into the political views they can see that it isn’t. The poor get the right to vote, but many job opportunities are not open to them because they didn’t have the money to go to school. Because of this many jobs, when they look at their resume, don’t see the educations and well pleased reports about how well they did in school, but what they don’t see is a person struggling for money and who is highly qualified for the job. This is why some resumes are blind. They can’t see the person writing them or how that person presents themselves, unless they are one of the people they pick. In John F. Kennedy’s address he states that they, “offer a special pledge . . . to assist free men and free governments in casting off the chains of poverty.” This quote shows that in his term he is planning to help out the rights of the poor for the better. He plans to help out the poor in any way he can. An expert of John F. Kennedy describes the themes of his Inaugural Address states, “The lofty idea of freedom is …show more content…
Kennedy’s Inaugural Address both suggest many different obligations and freedoms in the United States, they do this by how freedom helps the poor, helps the different races, and the privileges of freedom in our day. Race is one of the most controversial aspects in our lives today. The Civil Rights Movement expanded over a span of more than ten years. It was from 1954-1968. As he or she can see, there are many different ways he or she can look at this movement, in that it took fourteen years to fix. After it was fixed it still wasn’t perfect because the slaves hadn’t done anything else in their lives, besides their slaving away in the fields of the whites. Many didn’t know how to do anything else. No one understood this concept or else he or she would think something would have happened, except he or she would never know because the rights were still not fair after this project. At the beginning of John F. Kennedy’s inauguration the African-Americans were not fully imparted into political rights. The Presidential Library and Museum of John F. Kennedy states, “African Americans throughout much of the South were denied the right to vote, barred from public facilities, subjected to insults and violence, and could not expect justice from the courts” (Museum). This shows that many people didn’t want this to happen and didn’t understand why anyone would even want this, they said this because many people