When you say "American hero", what do you think? Do you think images of mythical characters such as firefighters, police officers, and even superhumans and magical women that symbolize the ideals of Americans? It may be irritating to try to give the current individual an appropriate name for "American hero". For Americans, the past ten years were filled with difficulties and difficulties. In the face of disasters, many people show extreme courage and patriotism. Are these people American heroes?
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King's assassination, it is now a reminiscence of a fierce battle for American citizens against citizenship. Revolutionaries almost always encounter resistance to maintaining the status quo, but assuming that maintaining this status will not change even with new faces of freedom, resistance will become even more steep even in the face of new equality. By comparing the movement of MLK with other movements, we can not underestimate the movement of MLK and decentralization is no exception, but this comparison still applies. The Internet is regarded as an equal plane. Local endless universe that everything can offer through interconnectivity, information accessibility, and self dependency. Very simple, place of citizenship. There is no intermediary - who can not come to the table? Who can not join this new economy? Who is allowed to enter the world of autonomy and free will, who can not have their own digital ID?
Throughout the history of the United States many battles have been betted for equal rights. From Rosa Park to Brown v. Board of Education, these historical heroes have built a foundation of perfect equality regardless of race, religion, and sexuality. Author Evan Wolfson says about civil rights protection as follows. "Protection of choices and differences in religion, opinion, identity, expression and intimacy - the true moral of our US Constitution." Diversity and choice will help us stay free - (173). Leslie's claim did not take into account the ideal of equal rights. His claims impair the political tendency to maintain the choice of marriage, which is a matter of equal protection for every citizen of the United States. Wolfson admits, "There is no American, no one, you must give up your difference so that you can be treated equally under the law" (173-174).