Shankar Vendamant a science reporter for The Washington Post and the author of the book “The Hidden Brain”. He analyze how still individuals in the United States are judging by the skin color, rather than by their character or their achievements or stories in life. He added also how this issue affect or determine, who gets the job in everyday life situation, who gets sentence in a criminal case, and who gets elected in politics view.
It’s sad and ironic that, a nation who defends other countries against discrimination of race and religion. Additionally proclaims equal opportunity for everyman and freedom when still have in their own territory issues with judging a person by the skin …show more content…
Also in his opinion the problematic has an impact how and for who the population will vote in the presidential race, like it happened not long ago with the actually President Election on 2008.
He conclude his essay about racial issues and prejudice by some Americans citizen in which he comment the short story on the introduction regard Harry Reid words or suggestion. Reid said "Obama had a political edge over other African-American candidates because he was "light-skinned and had "no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one". I like his sarcasm how he ended his statement with that sentence. "American may like to believe that we are now color-blind, that we can consciously it is remain a worthy aspiration.
Discrimination in any case is a disrespectful and despicable. It doesn’t matter or is about color, religion social class, or birth country. In my opinion judging others, a person only because these characteristics only could came from an ignorant person. Wasn’t discrimination the reason which unleashed a World War? Additionally, wasn’t not discrimination the main reason of the Ku Klux Klan to execute another human being? It’s time to reflect and change these judgmental attitude. So, I agree with Shakan, found his essay and observation about this issue by Americans, very well