The riots in Tasca, Alabama
On June 1963, 1 1, george wallace, the governor of Alabama, known as Mussolini of the United States, blocked the entrance to the registration building of the University of Alabama in Tasca and read a statement with symbolic threats in an attempt to prevent two black students from enrolling. He said that Alabama would never make concessions on the issue of educational apartheid, openly boycotting the federal troops sent by President John F. Kennedy and publicly boycotting the federal government's dismissal of him. 1963 is a year of vigorous development of American civil rights movement. Young President Kennedy decided to conform to the torrent of social development, expressed his personal support for the revolution, and did a lot of work in the fields of black voting rights, education, employment and so on. Kennedy once considered that if there were riots in Tuscaloosa, he would address the nation through television. After the unrest subsided, while the people's attention was still focused on this issue, he delivered a speech to the people: "This is not a regional issue, nor is it a party issue, or even a legal and legislative issue. We are mainly faced with a moral problem. This issue is as old as the Bible and as clear as the US Constitution. " We have initially convinced a moral problem. It is as old as a script and as clear as the US Constitution.) Before that, no American president has so frankly admitted the injustice of racial discrimination and bravely assumed the moral responsibility of eliminating racial discrimination. On August 28th of the same year, a large-scale public procession was held in Washington, D.C.-the March for Employment and Freedom in Washington. On that day, more than 200,000 people from different states and races peacefully maintained a warm sense of dignity and listened to Martin Luther King's exciting speech "I have a dream" on the stone steps of the Lincoln Monument. President Kennedy welcomed the leaders of the parade at the White House and admired their organizational ability, because there was no commotion of that scale in the parade.
Just look at Forrest Gump.