IT'S ΟΚΑΥ ΤΟ DISAGREE
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids|May/June 2023
John F. Kennedy spoke the words above during his 1960 presidential campaign.
Ruth Tenzer Feldman
IT'S ΟΚΑΥ ΤΟ DISAGREE

He was making a reference to four Black college students in Greensboro, North Carolina. They had walked into a variety store on February 1, 1960, and sat down at the store's white-only lunch counter. They had refused to leave until they were served or closing time came. They were refused service.

More Black students staged "sit-ins" at other lunch counters in the following weeks and months. By August, Greensboro's lunch counters which had always discriminated against Black customers by refusing to serve them were desegregated. These sit-ins were acts of civil disobedience. Civil disobedience is a peaceful form of political protest in which participants refuse to comply with a law or a government policy. In this case, African

Americans were fighting against the unfair Jim Crow laws in the South that had made them second-class citizens.

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