Liam Kelleher
Rasheda Young
1-6-17
English Workshop 1101
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhiLht1WUeejb5SLs0glBfV8Kjcc4G9PdAmiQWzhv6Q674ELR22H53LxCF-4VIeth5ZXdIzCODiyNBYA9FOekxIdY8eVOJ8fqJpCe4Q4BVB9-cZNxrtncekh41sesg6dniVuyC_lDtbFOE/s200/R8sSUq5.jpg)
Lee was dissent about the crisis in Friendswood, she was the only person who did not settle on the conclusion of what happened on the Taft Properties. Lee’s teenage daughter Jess died of a rare blood disorder that is believed to be caused by the chemical dumping. The death of Jess went unpunished and Lee has a constant feeling of unjust which drives her to compile evidence to prove that the chemical spill was not a freak accident, but was at fault of the Taft Oil Company. People look at Lee with disgust and pity, though they know what has happened to her daughter. Their are many examples other than in the book Friendswood.
Examples of dissent can be found throughout history, such as the civil rights movements. The era of civil rights were not caused by huge mobs of people who wanted a specific thing, it was caused by individuals such as Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. Who persuaded their fellow americans to strive for the same goal as them. Without those american icons being dissent from the group there may not have been a successful civil rights movement at all.
Dissent has built what americans now know as society, without it many things would be different. People everywhere have been affected by the dissent of others, both in the book Friendswood and in the real world. The world can benefit from more dissent thinkers and apposing views, but from people that are willing to compromise and create the optimal solution for the communities future.