After a brief encounter with Joe, the reader gets to see how Paul Farmer is a very compassionate man, one that allows himself to become attached and to make emotional connections with his patients. Soon after Farmer and Kidder become aware that Joe has described him to other residents at the hospital as "A fuckin Saint” the language in this passage becomes far more complex. The usage of these words conveys a larger picture of how Farmer is perceived by the people around him. Saint, defined by Mariam Webster ass "a person acknowledged as holy or virtuous and typically regarded as being in heaven after death." lets the readers get a bigger picture of his persona. Using a religious connection allows for a wider audience to realize how great of…
Homosexuality is not something that can be flaunted, but it is also not right or wrong, according to “The Message” translator and pastor Eugene Peterson.…
While reading "The Inequality Hype", there was a particular paragraph that really resonated with me. This paragraph talked about how Karl Marx essentially expressed that "all human labor has the same value". The article then goes on to explain that Marx thought this because "we are all equal in what he deems people’s most important characteristic—their humanity". This resonated with me because I don't necessarily believe this to be true. I mean, I do believe that our most important characteristic is our humanity, but I don't necessarily believe that this characteristic is equally present in each person.…
Statements that miscegenation destroys every race that practices it are mistaken. In fact, miscegenation or race mixing emphasizes a commitment to compromise and compassion for all humankind. Critics advocate that allies of miscegenation jeopardize religious fundamentals, such as a Christian 's posterity or a Muslim 's forgiveness. Critics also challenge the excessive amount of propaganda that favors miscegenation arguing that these tactics of acceptance are intensified by media exposure but not morally acceptable. While it is true that the media exposes a great deal of tolerance for miscegenation and do so within legal boundaries, Christians and Muslims have strong belifes in their faith and opposition on miscegenation. Regardless there are millions of people who deny this opposition and feel that their beliefs and compassion supersede the stance and seek to persuade people to look past their prejudices and consider the broader affect of miscegenation. By do that Americans can display their morals in the true form of freedom, in which collective values, rather than separate interpretations will represent the highest supremacy.…
There have been many advances in the fields of science & technology in recent history that have allowed our civilizations to advance in terms of size and productivity, but it seems that this has been accompanied by an increase in immorality, segregation and deadly hostilities amongst populations of different ethnicities based on the belief that there is an inferior ethnicity that must be viewed as animals. These beliefs become ideals that the ruling race uses as a tool to sway the general public into treating the “inferior” as animals in order to prepare that nation for their final solution in committing a genocide on those people. However, there are some people in the world who will not stand by and watch their fellow man suffer and will do whatever in their power to insure their safety. One of those people was Varian Mackey Fry and he was educated from Harvard University and was New York Times editor. During the Holocaust, which took place from 1933 to1945, he made the noble choice of going to Marseilles, France in an effort to save as many Jewish intellectuals and artists that were on Hitler’s list for execution.…
For most of us, treating people equally and appreciating people's differences is the basis of being a good citizen. This has to be learnt from a very early stage so that children can understand that no matter what differences people may have, we have to still be treated equally.…
Appiah poses a question: What do we owe strangers by virtue of our shared humanity? Appiah’s answers this with his personal story, history, literature, and philosophy. Pre-historic hunter-gatherers encountered fewer people in a lifetime than we would on a single day walking down the streets of Delhi, or New Orleans. Centuries ago, people lived in a world where they were isolated, and unable to communicate between different countries. Today we live in a world where most of what we do can affect people in other countries. According to Appiah we are responsible for every other human being. Appiah’s understanding of the responsibilities of a human being is that we should understand, and tolerate other countries, but not all people may actually want to accept other beliefs. We should be able to understand and tolerate other countries beliefs because that is how we are responsible for every other human being. Appiah gives many examples in his writing regarding these two factors.…
Our choices we make define people more clearly than anything else, whether rich or poor, or black or white.…
We all are different, there is no the same person in the world, so we should respect each other’s differences and cooperate.…
The article “How the rich get richer as the poor catch up” really opened my eyes with all the facts on global inequality. Our society tries to compare themselves to the people we see around us, but we don’t think abut the ones that are on the other side of the world. An example Francois uses is how French men wouldn’t care if a Chinese person exceeds his standard of living. Now if it was one of his fellow citizens and they started lagging on their standard of living then the French men would pay attention. In the article Francois says “Yet, when thinking about inequality, it also makes sense to approach the world as a single community” this quote caught my attention as a reader because we only care and think about ourselves when it comes to inequality.…
"All lives matter" is a universal moral principle, a Kantian categorical imperative. Other things being equal, all lives matter, equally. Except when they don't. And they don't when other things are taken not to be equal. Like racial standing in a society such as ours.…
In today’s society, it can be said that we have taken the value of life to another level. The government gives money to families who have lost a loved one, but the amount of money given has been decided in various ways. The amount of money given to each family is based on who they were, how they died, and on their personal backgrounds. Wouldn’t you think it would only be right to give each family the same amount of money and help regardless of differences? It would make sense because the Declaration of Independence specifically states, “all men are created equal’. With that said, shouldn’t we have equal life values?…
To have the capacity to take a gander at ourselves, as little creatures of a much greater creation and realize that our maker is something much greater than we, settles on us take choices that advantage ourselves as well as the general population that encompass us. The main thing that isolates people from different creatures is the capacity to confidence in something that is past what we can see, touch, or notice; this is the have faith in a higher being that is the ruler and maker of everything. Confidence in a higher being is the thing that makes us regard each other and trepidation to do off-base. Sharing, helping each other, and having the capacity to love our relative's future more than our own particular lives are all illustrations of how our most profound sense of being makes us…
“The human heart has ever dreamed of a fairer world than the one it knows.”- Carleton Noyes…
Furthermore, substantive equality emphasises the importance of recognising the cultural, political and legal choices of social groups. The emphasis is on affirming and recognising diversity and difference. For political minorities, equality of recognition/identity is vital as it helps to secure ‘a desire for equality [which] is not [based] on a hope for the elimination of all differences’ but one based on ‘equal concern and respect across difference’.…