Are humans in a race against the machine? Will the machines be taking over us one day?The same ever-popular fear lingered among some of us for generations. Some people is questioning whether technologies will benefit or harm us? I wholeheartedly deem that technologies is beneficent to us. Machines make human become more efficient if we know how to cooperate with them.…
ISR 3 The First Part Last by Angela Johnson is a book about a teenage boy named Bobby Morris a sixteen year old boy who has just found out on his birthday that his girlfriend Nia is pregnant with his child. After finding out this news a lot has changed in not just her life ,but also Bobbys. This isn’t your typical pregnancy story where the dad is not in the child's life it’s actually just the quite opposite.…
“Let’s stop believing that our differences make us superior or inferior to one another”- Don Miguel Ruiz. The novel “The Help” by Kathryn Stockett is a controversial and heart-wrenching story that depicts the cruel brutality and inequality that African Americans faced in Jackson, Mississippi during the early 1960’s. In the novel, Stockett shows the inequality between races, how Caucasian Americans believed they were superior, and the bigotry between social classes through the characterization of the main characters and bringing forth facts from that time setting. These issues have changed over the years but are yet still here in a more subtle way.…
In Susan Straight's essay, Travel with My Ex, she discusses about the experience of racism that her family have had. The author is a white women, who had married to a black man . They have three successful daughters and they are known as The Scholar, The Baller, and The Baby. It was the Scholar's eighteenth birthday and they were all heading down to Southern California to Huntington Beach for celebration. The Scholar was driving and all of a sudden, a officer pulled her over when she didn't do anything illegal. This recalled the mother's memory about something happened in the seventies---A officer thought her husband fitted the descriptions of a crime because he was a six feet four tall black guy and he was wearing a hat. The officer…
In “The Ethics of Living Jim Crow: An Autobiographical Sketch” is about the life lessons learned by a young black boy growing up in the segregated South in the 1910s and 1920s. Richard Wright, author’s life growing up in the segregated south. Right recalls many of the ways he was taught that black folk had a certain place in this world, and if one drifted from that place either by choice or accident, there would be a heavy price to pay. Time and time again Wright demonstrates how no matter what he did or what he said, he was always black and he better not ever forget it. These lessons were hard for Wright to learn because he always felt that he had to right to defend himself, educated himself, and be respected.…
Is it always a “good” thing to tell the truth? If a friend were to ask “does this shirt look good on me?” would someone lie and say yes just to spare the friend’s feelings? Or if someone wanted to go to the movies with a friend and the friend did not want to go, would he or she straight up say “no I don't want to go”? Or would they claim to be busy with something else just so there's no hard feelings?…
The inspector believed that Marian was incapable of driving or having…
Example: Your generation of humans was supposed to be better!” One of the robots yelled back. “But you’re not! You’re just as murderous as your ancestors!” (Haddix 295)…
In the book Citizen, written by Claudia Rankine, she shows us through her personal encounters that racism and inequality is still alive today in America. Whether it be from a stranger, or a close friend, attacks on her personal identity is a repetitive thing in her everyday life. As we progress through the book, we watch as Rankine struggles to fight the stereotypes that people place on her during her ongoing battle to be seen and not erased. We learn that this battle is bigger than Rankine herself, and that it is far from over.…
Throughout America’s communities today, the quality of schooling varies from school to school. In the book Our Kids the author, Robert Putnam, believes that the increased gap between the wealthy and poor is what causes the differences in school quality and opportunities for the students (Putnam, 2015). Recently, I had the pleasure of interviewing two of today’s youth, Josh and Erin. Their names have been changed for the sake of anonymity. Josh is a 17-year-old student at Shawnee Mission East High School, in Prairie Village, Kansas.…
Bibliography: Cisneros S, Eleven, Health Communications Inc., Deerfield Beach, FL, January, 1, 1997. (anthology), pp. 150-161.…
All of the characters in this book played a pivotal role in developing the themes of the book: justice, racism, prejudice, and sexism. The use of rhetorical devices allows for the author’s ideas to surface and enable the readers to encapsulate the concept of the text. Harper Lee used…
Reading the stories “What’s in a Name” and “Finishing School” provided insight into the mistreatment of people of color during a very defining period. Prejudice has plagued cultures and civilizations since recorded history. These two stories deal with direct and indirect events experienced by the narrators. Various factors effected how the affected dealt with the demeaning situations. The two narrators in the stories had varying circumstances, yet both endured racial slurs, retaliation, and riches (or lack thereof).…
Lee illustrates the prevalence of discrimination and racial profiling in America’s 1930’s. That is still the case in world today. Attitudes towards inequality in a negative way can bring out an ugly side of a person, one message Lee shows in her novel. An example of a negative attitudes towards minorities are racial slurs. Racial slurs, also used in the book, are tossed around like they do not mean anything. This exemplifies that the race or group being discriminated against are still inferior like in the book that is based in the 1930’s.…
This article shows us a few of the more un-explored avenues of racism, a problem that was extremely prevalent in American society…