Topic > National essay on peace - 948

“…for freedom and justice for all”. Those words mean more to us than we know. Without those words we would live in a different society. A society where we fear cops instead of thinking they will allow you to feel safe. Where you can trust those who guide you and know that they are trying to do the best they can for everyone, not just the people they confide in. A place where there is no war and which has itself discovered a small piece of peace. The United States has managed these standards and is now trying to help resolve conflicts in several countries that are overrun by wars, hostilities and dictators. Throughout history there have been leaders who have had complete control over everything, who have managed “political control through terror” (Paddon), and innocent people have been massacred. When there are countries that are going through all this and would like to get out of their government and out of war and into peace, there are some things that countries should be able to do. These countries must fight for what they believe in and what they want. This is what we want, what we need to change. Countries with a dictatorship have no peace and need to reform their government so they can have that sustainable peace instead of wars, genocides and dysfunctional security sectors. Rwanda and Africa have undergone several transformations over the past 25 years, and most of these changes have not been positive. The government underwent many changes and in 1961 it was a democracy, but it did not last long because in 1873 General Juvenal Jabyarimana overthrew the president and began what would be his twenty-year dictatorship. He was a Hutu, one of the three types of people who live there; the other two are the Tutsi and Twa who survive in this country. The Twa people make up only 1% of the population; THE