Heart Disease in African Americans Stacy Johnson HCS 245 June 14‚ 2012 Margaret Latham Heart Disease in African Americans Heart disease‚ technically known as cardiovascular disease (CVD)‚ is the number one killer of African Americans. Cardiovascular disease is the narrowing of arteries due to the build-up of atherosclerosis‚ or plaque‚ in the walls of arteries (Heart.org). This narrowing of the blood vessels and arteries causes the blockage of oxygen and blood supply needed for proper function
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Immigrants suffered a lot during this period‚ plus they were living in a very filthy condition. After 1865‚ American urban communities developed at a phenomenal rate‚ and urban populaces swelled with specialists from provincial regions and abroad. To move expanding populaces around the city‚ urban communities spearheaded imaginative types of mass travel. High rises came to check urban horizons‚ and new electric lighting frameworks energized nightlife. Neighborhoods partitioned along class and ethnic
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Writing the Struggle African Americans have struggled throughout history. This struggle has written upon by authors such as Fredrick Douglass‚ MLK‚ Malcolm X and Barack Obama. Their struggle has been an experience that not all of us know. This project is about their struggling lives. Martin Luther King Jr. was born on January 15‚ 1929 in Atlanta Georgia. From a young age‚ he realized the struggles that African Americans had. He became a pastor at his father’s church in 1947. There he talked about
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Step is common in today’s society. It was dance that originated in Africa by gold miners who were not allowed to speak to one another and had to use their hands and feet as means of communication. Africans came to America and formed the first African American fraternity. These fraternities are the ones that created todays’ “stepping” and based it on the traditional gumboot dances. The dancers endured a lot of suffering through their journey and brought something great to America that is now a crazed
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of African-Americans In the progress to become one of the liberal nation of the world‚ the United States has gone through so many political alternations of its lifetime. All of the presidents have made lots of different plans to build up a strong independent country that provides its citizenship equality. One of the great movement was the Reconstruction (1863-1877). It was a toss-up that was neither a total success nor failure. The result tremendously brought more freedom to African-Americans. Although
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by the African Americans through slavery‚ slavery had finally been abolished. On January 31‚ 1865‚ Congress passed the 13th amendment of the Constitution abolishing slavery from the United States. This‚ of course‚ was great news to African-Americans everywhere because now they could become just like every other American‚ right? Well while many black people hoped this to be true‚ unfortunately‚ it was not. While black Americans gained their freedom from being slaves‚ many African Americans in the
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The Role of African Americans in American Wars Imagine fighting a war for the freedom of a country in which you yourself were not free. Could you fight for a country that had enslaved you‚ a place where you have few or no civil rights? Throughout the history of American wars‚ these were the types of issues that African Americans had to deal with. They were forced‚ and many times volunteered‚ to serve‚ protect‚ defend‚ and preserve the freedom of the United States. They went to war for a country
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While America’s greatest challenges in cultural history have always been about race‚ American blues music exemplifies the complex relationship Americans have with race and art. American Blues music has been appreciated‚ examined‚ appropriated‚ and immortalized through the transformation of music over the past one hundred years. Originating from African American slave songs‚ the blues has over time lost its relevance for black people‚ yet continues to be an important cultural entity and has been revered
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Without contemplating the consequences for the Africans‚ the Europeans took advantage of African slaves due to the convenience of needing more labor workers and as additional export markets for the European manufacturers. The Atlantic slave trade (1500-1866) was an enterprise that was entirely in the hands of the Europeans. It all started with sugar. At first the Europeans did not know much about sugar‚ so they had to rely on other things such as fruits and honey to make their bland diets a little
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dominant society and the dominant culture. This is much true with the African American society which suffered victimization in the hands of the European (native) Americans. There was victimization not only of the blacks by the whites‚ but also the victimization of the blacks by the blacks themselves. Deprived of their history‚ their language‚ their education‚ their family structure‚ their access to capital‚ even their gods‚ African Americans post-slavery were strangers both to themselves
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