Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote a sad fictional story about the hardship of slavery. The book describes a life of a slave who is sold again and again and finally meet his end at the hand of his last mastered. Uncle Tom’s cabin is an amazing book that describe the life of Tom and other slaves who fight on to keep their family together. Her book revealed the inhumane cruelty of slaves separated from their families…
After the September 2001 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center Towers, the United States government reacted quickly in order to increase the aviation safeties at the local airports (Robert W. Poole, 2012). Congress designed the Transport Security Administration (TSA) in November 2001 (Chris Edwards, 2013) with the main purpose of protecting the nation’s transportation system acting as an efficient and effective counterterrorist organization through screening of passengers at the airports (TSA, 2001). However, due to some problems and monopoly on behalf of the TSA, some airports such as San Francisco International Airport (SFO) were demanding and were granted a private airport security screening contract from…
Millions of people fly annually. Almost everyone has or will travel by plane in his lifetime whether he is traveling for the holidays, visiting family, or important business trips. This must mean that they must have been at an airport, and if they have been to an airport, that means they have shared the experience of airport scanners. After 9/11, security measures have been increased which seems to have led to racial profiling. The major frustrations for many Americans are the Airport Security Scanners. Scanners were created since 1992 when Dr. Steven Smith first created them. Their primary purpose is to detect anyone who is trying to smuggle any harmful object or substance that could be used as a weapon onto a plane. Some welcome the machines as protection and others see as the same threat the scanners try to pick up. It now bubbles down to the question “Should scanners or pat-downs be required to go through if one wants to travel by plane?”…
Every picture speaks a thousand words; however, this picture speaks so many more. Uncle Toms Cabin written by Harriet Beecher Stowe, was crucial for equality of slaves. The piece of art is showing that African Americans can get along with white people, in this case a young white girl. The young white girl is influential to the picture for many reasons. To start off with, since it is a child, it shows that young generations can change the way the older generations act, in this case treating former slaves, and African Americans the same way they treat everyone. The art also became that much more sensitive to the public because if it was a middle age white man, most people viewing the picture would not care, or think it is the African Americans…
The play 39 Steps was full of drama, comedy and much more which made the play extremely thrilling. The play originated by Alfred Hitchcock then adapted by Patrick Barlow and directed by Kate Buckley. I viewed this play at the Clarence Brown Theatre on Sunday September 13,2015 at 2:00 in the afternoon. Schaad produced the play with the help of Samuel French; INC. David Brian Alley is in his sixteenth season at Clarence Brown Theatre (CBT) and has appeared in over 40 productions. Brian Gligor better know as Richard Hannay lived in worked in professionally in New York for over ten years. David Kortemeier is returning for his tenth season at CBT and has done a numerous amount of productions. Katie Cunningham was the only female in the production and she played as Annabella Schmidt, Pamela, and Margaret. In the play it was three major areas of production that really…
Equally important, as we all understand that the government of the United States is mandated to strike a balance between the civil liberties and overall security, some of the Acts such as that called PATRIOT Act are supposed to ensure that the future challenges that will face the homeland security will have tomust provide a secure air transportation system (Nakaya, 2005). This is because PATRIOT Act will offer the best way to go alongside other existing laws in the United States. When such laws are in action, it is the function of the Civil Authorities to see into it that the same laws are not abused in any way.…
The USA Patriot Act of 2001 is a controversial public policy, which greatly undermines the civil liberties and constitutional freedom of the American people. This essay will moved from an overview of the USA Patriot Act to a review of the critical literature regarding the importance of the Act to the safety of Americans and shows how the Act violates the civil rights and liberties of citizens and noncitizens alike. After presenting sufficient evidence that the Patriot Act violates many of the basic principles that have been articulated in the U.S. Constitution, particularly within the Bill of Rights, I will, propose recommendations that if implemented scrupulously could help to restore American confidence in government's determination to continue functioning as the protector of civil liberties and rights.…
The TSA (Transportation Security Administration) has many issues and has caused many problems. Some people are saying that the only way to fix these problems that the TSA created is to privatize airport security. The TSA was created when congress passed the Aviation and Transportation Security Act. Their main focus was to keep anything that could be used as a weapon off of airplanes. Over the years the TSA has banned various items and has added new security procedures, such as taking off shoes. As a result of this, the lines have gotten drastically longer and and people are getting upset because they are missing their flights. Also, because of the cookie cutter type of security, it leaves little room for the TSA to change and adapt to new…
This amendment is demolished the moment you step through the doors of an airport. Many people believe this to be an issue. The aviation and transportation security act poses a blanket that allows searches without cause as long as terrorism poses a risk. However, the searches should not be more than necessary. For example, body scanners are an intrusion on privacy, for they take pictures of your naked body to ensure harmful objects are not smuggled through security. In addition, it forces the elderly to raise their arms when they are weak and frail to take a picture of their body. Also, passengers can be accused of “possible” smuggling resulting in a “handsy” pat down. Such as, bladder cancer patient, Thomas Sawyer left the airport mortified. Thomas had been a bladder cancer patient for years having a urostomy bag to collect his urine. He was on his way to Florida when he was stopped in security and had to have a pat down. This resulted in a TSA agent hitting his urostomy bag after being warned and broke the seal of the bag causing urine to spray everywhere especially on Sawyer. Sawyer said,“I was absolutely humiliated, I couldn’t even speak.” (Harriet Baskas) In conclusion, this violates people’s individual rights by intruding on their privacy. Is traveling worth it in these…
The Patriot ACT has greatly affected how America deals with situations involving terrorism, or threats of terrorism, but the main problem is simple, and that is that it deprives American citizens of certain rights and liberties. And now imagine if you had to choose between your privacy and your safety. Pretty hard choice, right? And this is how many Americans feel today, because they have to make this choice. And this essay will break down what the Patriot Act is and the argument for, and against, the act itself. And this act is relatively new, as it was created in the early 2000’s under the presidential leadership of George W. Bush. And there are multiple reasons why the Patriot Act is unconstitutional, and they will be mentioned, and elaborated on, throughout this essay, such as our right to privacy as American citizens, and our right to our amendments, and will also touch on how the opposition believes that this act is necessary to our survival as a nation and why they are wrong.…
The TSA (Transportation Security Administration) search people at airports. That is their job. Sadly, they are very bad at their job.Their highly intrusive searches have driven kids to tears, to do what? See if the 6 year old clutching onto his mom for dear life sobbing is packing a gun? Well, yes and nothing can be done to stop it. The TSA should not be gotten rid of… just reworked completely. Planes have gotten more advanced over the years and now have criminals. See how airport security Isn’t on that list? It’s because it hasn’t gotten more advanced. In 2015 the TSA missed all mock weapons and explosives that tried to get through. The TSA is invading the universal rights that people have. The government needs to change how security runs because they are doing it wrong. People may argue that they have stopped over 10,700 people from entering the US but this is a miniscule number compared to the amount of illegal immigrants who actually come.…
This issue is similar to the racial profiling tactics used by Transportation Security Administration officers at countless airports across the United States. Since the September 11th…
Ever since the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York, America has been racial profiling in airports. A lot of people think that this is the best thing to do to stop terrorists from coming into the United States, and I completely agree with them. Looking at what a person is wearing can tell a lot about who they might be. For instance, if I am going through the security lines at an airport, and I see someone in front of me wearing a head wrap that looks like they are from the Middle East, I am going to be very scared and on edge of what they might do. I am not saying that every Middle Easterner is a terrorist, but it’s better to get them searched than have many people harmed because security let them slide through. Our international airports have allowed many terrorists into our country. Just look at how many other attacks we have had since the incident in September of 2001. International Security tells us that America has had 9 violent Jihadist Attacks since then.(“Deadly Attacks…
Racial profiling did not occur simply out of choice, but Americans soon latched to the idea overwhelmed by fear. With the approach of the new century, the idea of terrorism hitched onto the back of American minds as something that only occurred in vintage war films. To their surprise, their entertainment transfigured into a life-changing grotesque horror. “In the immediate aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, there was an apparent shift in the debate about racial profiling, ” (Ramirez.) the need to sacrifice their security, became prominent over their idea for protection. The building that once defied man’s expectation, soon crumbled competently onto the concrete gravel. Following the events, more attempts similar to Sept. 11 occur on domestic airlines. Evidently, the ideas of fear, pressured Americans to use their suspicions as a means of protection. On January 16, 2002, just months after the tragedy with the twin towers, Richard Colvin Reid, an Al-Qaeda member and Osama Bin Laden follower, attempted to detonate a bomb inside American Airlines Flight 63. “Because of Reid's actions, the FAA, on December 11, 2001, announced a civil aviation security warning that terrorists may try to sneak weapons onto aircraft in their shoes,”(Lerner) a new protocol announced civil aviation security to do…
Ever since the terrorist attacks of September 11 there have been an increase in the willingness to condone law enforcement and security actions based primarily on the color of ones’ skin. Since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, it has been the official policy of the United States government to stop, interrogate, and detain individuals without criminal charges on the basis of their national origin, ethnicity and religion. Thus, the term racial profiling was coined. Society, however, has been ignorant to the true meaning of racial profiling and has sometimes misinterpreted the government’s continuous attempts to keep the society safe. It is important for the society; especially the group affected most, in this case the minorities, to fully understand what exactly this term means. Racial profiling entails picking someone out for special scrutiny, simply because of his or her race. It happens when highway police officers pull over black people who have committed no traffic violations of any sort and intentionally ignore whites presuming that black people are more likely to be involved in criminal acts. It happens when people of Middle Eastern descent are singled out and strip-searched because of their looks. There are at least a million people in the United States who are of Middle Eastern descent; do we then consider them all terrorists? Fundamentally, believing that one can achieve safety by looking at characteristics instead of behaviors is wrong. In the essay “Close Encounters with U.S Immigration.” by khan and the essay “Everything Isn’t Racial Profiling.” by Chavez, they both agree on the fact that racial profiling is wrong.…