Pocahontas, a well known figure in history, was the main topic of John Smith’s letter to Queen Anne of Great Britain in 1616. John Smith was incredibly fond of her and believed that she should be welcomed and respected in England. John Smith speaks highly of Pocahontas, as well as Queen Anne in this letter. John has had many encounters (both good and bad) with Pocahontas, and he mentions these instances in a positive and respectful way. John Smith creates emphasis and uses different techniques to convey his message to Queen Anne. He uses hyperboles as well as personification to enhance his main idea. While this letter is meant to be about Pocahontas, he also speaks about Queen Anne herself in order to help persuade her.…
In the case of Smith v. United States, the plaintiff, John Angus Smith, was convicted of engaging in drug-trafficking, which would have granted him a five year sentence had he not “used” a firearm in regards to the incident. As stated in statute 924(c)(1), the use of firearm in relations to a drug-trafficking crime enhanced the sentence, and turned it into a 30-year sentence. The argument at hand is whether the term “use” was to be taken from a broad dictionary definition or in the ordinary meaning. The majority of the court argued that the term “use” should not be limited to the intended use of the firearm (as a weapon) as they exemplified cases of which the firearm was used as a bludgeon even though that was not it’s intended purpose, yet…
Answer: The hearsay rule prohibits statements made outside of court to be offered as proof, in admitting evidence. However there are exceptions to the hearsay rule, which includes statements made in 1) excitement utterance, this is defined as statements made while the declarant was under stress of excitement which caused it. 2) Present impression, statements made during or right after the declarant perceived it. 3) There are various records rules; such as public records which are marriage, death, and birth if reported to legal office, observations made while on public duty like how many times an officer has had disciplinary actions against him or her while on duty. Cases filed in courts prior…
too weak to get involved in a war and too dependent on British trade. They agreed that the…
1. In the essay, Outsiders/Insiders, Joseph Boskin, history professor who taught 30 years at Boston University African American studies, director of Urban Studies and Public Program and whose devoted his time and research on the study of American Humor and its relationship to social change and historical events and author of many books of humor's peculiar lies claims that jokes have been greatly influenced by people's personal experiences in American society.…
Cross-examination is critical during litigation. Many cases have to be proven based on solely witness testimony because of the lack of physical evidence. Therefore, the responsibility of a witness to tell the truth relies on methods to encourage witnesses to maintain their credibility. According to Gardner and Anderson in their book Criminal Evidence: Principles and Cases, the witnesses must take an oath or affirmation that their say will be true and the witnesses must be personally present at the trial in order to ensure the right to confront as stated in the Sixth Amendment. Finally, witnesses are subject to cross-examination. But if it is found that the witness lies, he or she is taking the risk to be charged with perjury or in contempt if the witness refuses to answer a question, unless it is protected by privilege (Gardner and Anderson, 2010).…
The Dred Scott Supreme Court decision is an embarrassment in American history. Before the the case was brought to the court Dred Scott,an enslaved African American, tried to buy his freedom for $300 but the offer was declined. He finally went to the court to see if his freedom could be granted through the legal system. However he lost on a technicality because he could not provide sufficient proof that he was owned by Emerson’s widow. In 1850 there was a retrial in the Missouri supreme court, which granted them freedom. However two years later the Supreme court stepped in and reversed that ruling. He finally appealed to the United States Supreme Court, which ruled that because he was black he was not a citizen, in effect he restricted, or…
Self-discovery is defined as the act or process of achieving understanding or knowledge of oneself. To understand ourselves sometimes we have to step outside our own world. In doing this we start to discover new one. Chris and the Chief had to do just that in their journeys of self-discovery. But what they discovered in the end was the most important lesson they would ever learn.…
In Jon Hassler's Grand Opening , Brendan Foster is becoming an adult. Which requires a conscious effort to right one's wrongs and make peace with one's foolishness.…
George Washington is the first president of the United States and he was called “the father of his country”. As same as Roger Williams, George Washington supports the religious freedom. According to the article, “…Washington refrained from endorsing any particular form of religion” (Chernow 52).…
On Monday, March 15, 1965, President Lyndon B Johnson addressed the nation by delivering his “We shall overcome” speech in response to a fatal racial brutality that had erupted in Selma, Alabama a week prior. African Americans were attacked by police while preparing to march to Montgomery to protest voting rights discrimination. Johnson's speech warrants consideration on its rhetorical meaning due to its lasting contribution to U.S. political and rhetorical history. The speech’s significance lies in the creation of meaning of equal voting rights. Through his words, the nation's problem of voter discrimination becomes apparent. He directs his focus on what defines the nation, "the American Promise." The interpretation of those words rationalized a direct passage of the federal voting rights law.…
As the United States entered the 20th century, new historical works began to surface over the complex period known as the Reconstruction era that followed the Civil War. The period which has been subject of such varied and conflicting interpretations was headed by the works of William Dunning. The Dunning School, while certainly influenced by the racism of its day, believed Reconstruction failed due to the black community being unprepared and unfit to properly express the political rights that were thrown upon them by Northern politicians. These works were followed up by the Progressives, namely, W.E.B. Du Bois, who published Black Reconstruction in America. Du Bois’ monumental study portrayed Reconstruction as an idealistic effort to construct a democratic, interracial political order from the ashes of slavery that viewed the freedman as the central figures of Reconstruction.…
There are two types of network errors; 1 is corrupted data and 2. Lost data. The network…
In this essay I will analyze James Rachel’s Smith and Jones case for active and passive euthanasia. Furthermore, I will give an ethical reasoning for why I either agreed or disagreed with his opinion. Additionally, I will show how he lures our attention to the dissimilarities amongst his view of killing and allowing someone to die. I will do so by refining my propositions and reaction of this case, of the dispute of active and passive euthanasia. By defending Rachel’s case I will discuss why I sided with Rachel on his moral reasoning’s.…
Questioning a person’s sanity after the commitment of an inhumanely gruesome crime is completely natural, but it is something that we must do. It is hard to believe that someone sound of mind could murder, dismember, and hide the corpse of a loved man- but this is exactly what has happened in the case of Missouri v. Smith. In summary, here is the case: Mr. Johnson has been murdered by Mr. Smith. The murder was premeditated, meaning Smith planned it. The motivation, Smith says, is that Johnson had an "evil eye" which caused the Smith stress and agony. Therefore, Smith decided that he must murder the old man in order to rid himself of the evil eye. Every night for seven nights, at around midnight, Smith opened Johnson's door and looked inside, specifically at the his eye. Finally, on the eighth…