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John Stuart Mill: The Crusade Of Human Rights

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The idea of human rights is something that has long been discussed and defined, and that is still being discussed today, whether at the Capitol, on the nightly news or in line at the grocery store. The most basic definition of the term “human rights” would be somewhere along the lines of “people are equal and entitled to certain rights.” The reason for such debate lies in defining what exactly those rights should be, and who should be entitled to them. In the 1859, John Stuart Mill, an English philosopher, proposed that there are three basic human rights: the freedom of expression, the freedom of assembly, and the freedom to act as long as those actions do not harm others. While this concept sounds simplistic now, this was a controversial …show more content…
Stuart Mill also took up the crusade of women’s rights, penning an 1869 essay entitled The Subjection of Women in which he stated on the opening page “[T]he principle which regulates the existing social relations between the two sexes—the legal subordination of one sex to the other—is wrong in itself, and now one of the chief hinderances to human improvement; and that is ought to be replaced by a principle to perfect equality.” At the time he wrote these words, American women could not vote and, after they were married, they could not own property, keep their own wages, sign legal documents, or have any legal say about their …show more content…
In 1869, a 15th amendment to the Constitution was proposed that would allow men of any race the right to vote. Many felt that the amendment should also include people of any gender and were frustrated that the rights of women were put on the back burner while the rights of more men were being strengthened; others supported the amendment fully despite the exclusion of gender. Because of this, a split occurred within the movement and two separate Suffrage Associations were formed, the National Woman’s Suffrage Association (NWSA) and the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA). These groups also differed in how they went about procuring the right to vote: the NWSA supported an amendment to the Constitution while the AWSA felt that they would be more successful trying to change individual state’s

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