In September 1999 police found six-year-old girl Betty Topper chained to a bed with 'what appeared to be' a dog leash, after they got a tip from an anonymous caller who said the child had not been seen in years. Her mother Cyndi Topper later confessed that she had been chained there for five years.…
She continued to make many changes that incredibly benefitted the country. It was when she was appointed Secretary of Education that she became apparent and influential to the public. It was from then where she begun to make some major changes. She revived the economy, improved outdated institutions and strengthened the nation’s foreign policy. However in doing so she was not always very popular. She also became one of the founders of a school of conservative conviction politics. This raised her status considerably as it had a strong and beneficial impact on politics. She was one of the most…
As a young adult, she knew what she wanted to become. She hadn’t ever even held a camera before, however she was dreaming up her photography career. She had enough courage to walk right up to a well-known photographer in New Jersey, head held up high, and ask for a job. Surprisingly, she got the job. She had a great sensitivity to others’ pain and injustices, that sensitivity grew during the Great Depression. She started taking pictures of the pain, the hunger, and fear many Americans faced on a daily basis during this time. Her sensitivity was most likely caused by the fact that her own life wasn’t an easy one.…
Josephine Baker was living proof that black people could achieve the same fame and fortune as whites without having to give up their personalities or their racial identities. She contributed so much to our society in many forms, such as her talent and her positivity. She truly believed that racial tolerance was unnecessary and that if we worked hard enough slowly but surely the line between races would get smaller and smaller. She worked hard everyday to make sure that she left this planet better than she found up until the day she passed…
Watching the documentary, the New Asylum opened my eyes a lot. I have heard the saying, “prisons are the new asylum” plenty of times, but I did not believe it to be true until watching the documentary. Before watching it I always viewed the prison system as a very harsh and coercive place, but now I see how much it help people with mental illness. If it wasn’t for the prison system some people would not have a place for treatment. I believe if the government had better funding there would be less reoffender. I say this because once they reenter society they are not able to adapt to normal life activities. In the documentary, the prisoners would be returning back to prison within a month. If they had more steps once they are…
She started her work career as a Director of a day nursery on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. This experience gave her an acute awareness of her social surroundings. She saw first-hand how minorities were in substandard housing, inadequate schools, subjected to drugs and police brutality and no basic civil rights. This was when she determined that bad government had a connection to the fate of these minorities. She joined the Bedford-Stuyvesant Political League and gained lots of experience and political insight. She helped her neighbors to register to vote, unemployed to get jobs, students to get scholarships and fought with the league for 10 years and gained lots of respect and connections.…
In 1888, Nellie Bly wanted to write an article about her race around the world. Hoping to beat the former record of 80 days set by Jules Verne. On November 14, 1889 she embarked on the ship Augusta Victoria. And, on January 25, 1890 she set foot in New Jersey to publish her new book, “Around The World in 72 Days.”…
She was involved in many organizations that were focused on solving issues around the United States. Nellie was the head of the Treasury Assay Committee (Doren 898). She was also a major member of the largest women’s organization in the 19th century called the Women’s Christian Temperance (Felbinger 67). Since Nellie was a leader of so many organizations which led her famous career, she impacted the people around her by encouraging women to be powerful leaders in a femininely way. This forever changed culture because women started to be involved in important matters of the nation.…
While in different avenues she had to bring others to see the issues she saw, make others feel strongly about what she did, and have congressional members from across the aisle come together to agree on legislation. By talking with these various people, she was able to overcome some of the obstacles presented to her in these…
Before Florence Nightingale started to improve nursing as a practice public health care system was underdeveloped. People who were living in urban areas didn’t have access to clean water and proper sewage disposal. Most of the sick people were treated at their homes and cared for by their family members.…
Every day is the same to you; you wake up, read the paper, and drink your coffee. You work at the East Cambridge Prison, where you keep the inmates in order by whipping them, chaining them up, and by not giving them food. You know that the conditions are wrong and inhumane, but it’s a well-paying job. You don’t speak out because you’re worried about your family and three kids at home who need to be fed. Stories like these occurred in prisons and mental institutions all around the world. The article, “Dorothea Lynde Dix,” describes the awful conditions Dorothea Dix witnessed in prisons and mental institutions: “... flogged, starved, chained, physically and sexually abused by their keepers, and left…
Nursing is a job we would consider a very selfless job. It’s a job that requires you to be at your best at every moment because someone’s life or well-being is depending on you. Long shifts may get you tired, you may not have a lunch break because you are working non-stop but you could care less. All you care about is impacting the lives of others. You are constantly putting others before yourself. Well in this case Florence Nightingale was the person who did just that. Florence Nightingale was born on May 12 in the year of 1820 in Florence Italy. Her parents named her after the Italian cities in Italy. In her early teens Florence discovered that she wanted to become a nurse not just because she wanted to do it, but the simple fact that she had got a “calling from God” to do God’s work. Florence’s parents did not want her to pursue the career in being a nurse because they did not make as much during those days. But this didn’t stop her she continued to fulfill her dreams at the age of 17 and was determined not to get distracted for…
This is an example of dehumanization with all the girls at the working camp. Each girl in the working camp was given a set of numbers. This meant that each girl was given a new name for all that matter in the camp. The officer in that camp told all of the girls that their new name is going to, and this was the name tag. They called that way at the camp This shows dehumanization to the people at the camp because they are treating them not like a human being. Instead of calling them by their name, they decide on calling them by numbers. They are treated differently than other people.…
Harriet Tubman is a woman of faith and dignity who saved many African American men and women through courage and love for God. One would ponder what would drive someone to bring upon pain and suffering to one’s self just to help others. Harriet Tubman was an African American women that took upon many roles during her time just as abolitionist, humanitarian, and a Union Spy during the American civil war. Her deeds not only saved lives during these terrible time’s but also gave other African Americans the courage to stand up for what they believe in and achieve equal rights for men in women in the world no matter what their skin color or gender was. Born to the parents of slaves Harriet Tubman changed the world in more ways than one and will be explained in the essay.…
The Frontline episode “The New Asylums”, dove into the crisis mentally ill inmates face in the psychiatric ward in Ohio state prisons. The episode shows us the conditions and every day lives of mentally ill patients in Ohio state prisons, and explains how these inmates got to this point. It appeared that most of these prisoners should have been patients in an institute of some sort, out in society, but unfortunately due to whatever circumstances they ended up in prison. According to the episode, most of the inmates end up in prison due to them not coping with the outside world on their own. Prior to becoming imprisoned, the inmates had difficulties dealing with the outside world. Mainly due to lack of necessary psychiatric treatment, the soon to be inmates would get arrested for things such as violent behavior, robbery, and rape. This behavior would cause them to go to jail, and after repeated offenses they end up falling into prison.…