02 Feb
02Feb

By: Pablo Melo.


In the United States many people are fighting for equal rights Because along the history of the United States, Men always had the first voice and they didn’t care about the women’s opinion. Today women are fighting against that problem because men still have more rights than women. There will likely be a long fight in the government of the U.S. legislature before things actually change, as the legislators who originally passed the Amendment in 1972 set, and then extended, a time limit for ratification by the United States.



Along the history of the USA women have always been on the left hand of the country, they didn’t care about their opinions because the people thought they were so not right. Women didn’t even had the right to vote because they thought they would ruin the country because of which way they preferred to go.


Women have gone 97 years trying to get the same equal rights as men but they have failed one and another time repeatedly amount of times because they don’t have the enough evidence or information to get the consulate to believe in them and say that they are right and that they need to have the same rights.


Human rights are rights characteristic to all human creatures, anything our nationality, put of home, sex, national or ethnic root, color, religion, dialect, or any other status. We are all similarly entitled to our human rights without separation. These rights are all interrelated, forbid and indivisible.


Sources:

The Equal Rights Amendment. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.ushistory.org/us/57c.asp

Thulin, L. (n.d.). The Equal Rights Amendment Is 97 Years Old and Still Not Part of the Constitution. Here's Why. Retrieved from https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/equal-rights-amendment-96-years-old-and-still-not-part-constitution-heres-why-180973548/

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