How the Americans with Disabilities Act transformed a country
This groundbreaking civil rights legislation—signed into law in 1990—was “the world's first declaration of equality for people with disabilities.”
During the signing ceremony—days after the Fourth of July—Bush admitted that the United States hadn’t always lived up to its founding principles of freedom and equality. “[T]ragically, for too many Americans, the blessings of liberty have been limited or even denied,” he said. “Today’s legislation brings us closer to that day when no Americans will ever again be deprived of their basic guarantee of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”
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