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Stereotypes Of The American Dream
We often refer to the U.S as a country of immigrants. Because there are so many different people
from all over the world, it is hard to identify what the typical American is like. When you think of
the USA, some stereotypes will probably come to mind – they love hamburgers, listen to country
music, each own their own guns and are probably fat. However, does this stereotype fit everybody?
It is often said that America is a country built on freedom, which is quite ironic considering the way
the Europeans stole the land from the Native Americans and the country is built upon the backs of
black slaves. What many Americans have in common is that they believe in the American Dream.
The American Dream is difficult to define, but the idea is finding ... Show more content on
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They tend to vote for the Republican Party and identify themselves as Christian. To mention another
region, El Norte has been influenced by the Hispanics and has taken some important Latino values;
family loyalty and group solidarity. In New Netherland, the early belief in freedom of religion,
speech and trade became a trademark and it still is today. The Native Americans are the indigenous
people of America. They were the first people of America and are worth mentioning when
discussing who the Americans are today. Native Americans have their own traditions and beliefs.
Unfortunately, the white settlers have mistreated them and because of that, many have lost a part of
their culture and those who do not live in reservations have had to adjust to the more common
culture. In conclusion, it is hard to define the typical American. What most have in common are the
core values – freedom. The Americans are often very patriotic and are big believers in the
constitution as well as their government. Most of them believe in the American Dream although
many young people doubt it. Like–minded people often end up living in the same places and that is
why it is easier to identify each region's values that the whole country's
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The Hidden Gift Of Being An American Essay
Being able to call yourself an American is a gift, that holds hidden meanings. To me, the definition
of an American is someone who embraces both freedom and the responsibility that comes with it.
America has promised the experience of freedom in race, religion, gender, and the right to express
yourself. Americans know this reality did not occur overnight. Many courageous people fought and
are still fighting for freedom. However, the hidden meaning of behind the reality of being an
American can be demonstrated as greed and longing for wealth or power. This hidden truth is a
mask many Americans may wear, because they are to ashamed to admit how the American Dream is
changing into materials and ethics. The twenty first century is losing the prideful gift of being an
American. Frederick Douglass was a man who fought for his freedom and faced all the
responsibilities that came with it. He was heroic and lionhearted, who had no hidden qualities.
Frederick Douglass called out white Christians for their approval of slavery on religious grounds.
He believed, "Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet ... Show more content on
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He once said, "No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself and another to the
multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true." Hawthorne demonstrated
the hidden truth of being an American may be represented as a mask many Americans may wear,
because they are to ashamed to admit their failures. Such as, in the novel The Great Gatsby a man
was to ashamed he was poor. His name was Gatsby, he hid behind a mask or hidden truth of wealth.
He describes his mask as, "You see I usually find myself among strangers because I drift here and
there trying to forget the sad things that happened to me." Gatsby became rich to try and conquered
the American Dream of being happy. However, in the end he died alone full of
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Mfdp Research Paper
Despite the horrific violence, two influential projects had their start during Freedom Summer, the
Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, or MFDP, and Freedom Schools. The goal of the MFDP was
to show the whites of Mississippi that if given the chance the African American voters would come
to the polling places in droves to vote. The party was led by African American residents of the state
who wanted the elective franchise, or the vote. In addition to registering voters to the party, the
African American leaders held a Freedom Vote on the same day as the actual elections in the state to
show that the state's African Americans wanted to be involved in the political process. The vote was
a huge success with over 80,000 African Americans across the state registering and "voting" for
representatives from the party. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
At the beginning of August, students from freedom schools gathered for a convention, and their
"increased confidence and political awareness [was] manifest." At this conference, the students were
asked to vote on resolutions that concerned them, such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964, slum
clearance, and the elimination of the poll tax. Freedom Schools not only stayed open after Freedom
Summer was over, they had a lasting impact on the students who went to them. Students who went
to Freedom Schools often had a better understanding of the political system than their counterparts
and learned curriculum that fit their
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The American Dream In I Hear America Singing By Walt Whitman
During this era the American dream was the notion that a man could create a successful life for
himself and his family. As discussed earlier, America effectively isolated women and African
Americans, therefore they had no way to make a living to support themselves. A prime example of
this would be in the poem I Hear America Singing by Walt Whitman. Whitman describes the sound
of America as one of hard work produced by workers. He writes, "the carpenter singing his as he
measures his plank or beam " (Whitman 3). It illustrates the hard work that Americans put into their
careers, and their willingness to support the nation's economy. No African Americans appear in the
poem, and Whitman describes women working in the house. Once again, the exclusivity of the
nation only allows white males to have a chance of achieving a pleasant, stable life. At this time, a
majority of African Americans remained enslaved across the Nation, which prohibited them from
being able to build any sort of life for themselves. Therefore the American Dream is not even an
option for almost a quarter of the population. How could someone prohibited from leaving a
plantation be able to support themselves and live an acceptable life? For almost all African
Americans the idea was unthinkable until the later half of the 1860's when the government abolished
slavery. When it comes to women, however, one could say that living the American dream was
possible. Women in America worked in the home cleaning, cooking
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Frederic Douglass Essay
The United States of America is a country that was founded on the basic principles of freedom and
liberty. This often leaves it with a reputation as a land full of hope, where anything is possible as
long as one is willing to work hard for it. Unfortunately, this idea is not always true. Frederick
Douglas, who was born a slave, did not have the privelege of this aforementioned freedom, liberty,
and social mobility. Even though he was an exceptionally bright man, he was enslaved and
persecuted because of his skin color. His life represents both the failure and success of the American
dream, with the failure being the extremely more dominant, because of the color of his skin.
	The most fundemental of aspect of the American dream is ... Show more content on
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(Quote where he says he felt freedom) Feeling this yearnig from freedom at such a young age shows
that being free was a god given right or "Law of nature", as Jefferson so eloquently
stated in the Declaration of Independence. With all of this is mind it is very clear Douglass being
born in to slavery was a deifinite failure of the American Dream.
	In the Declaration of Independence one of the most famous portions goes as follows:
"We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed
to certain unailiable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness."
This pursuit of happiness is a very important part of the American dream, for it is the result of all the
rights that were layed out. By being alloted these rights a person is free to pursue happiness in their
life, whatever happiness may be to them.
	It is very ironic that when Douglass finally got his first taste of freedom he had to be
deceptive in sneaking away from his owner, just as the writers of the constution were deceptive in
their defintion of "man". Once Douglass escaped from slavery he was surprised to find
that the north also a very racist place. Not only did the majority of northern whites still feel that
blacks were inferiour, New York was full of people looking to turn in fugitive slaves. Frederick also
found that his abolitionist friends were not free from this prejudice. At gatherings
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The Importance Of Freedom In Persepolis
Evident in the abundant arguments regarding freedom and to the extent of which these freedoms are
protected by legislation, Americans typically believe that their fellow citizens can be trusted with
almost unlimited freedom. Americans exercise many privileges such as speaking freely and having
access to news media (whether true or fictitious) that we assume are our basic human rights. We
believe that the more freedom we have the better and that we can control ourselves rather than
relying on external pressures on freedom However, these are not given to all people and were in fact
punishable offenses for Marjane Satrapi in her childhood and young adulthood as a woman in Iran
as revealed in Persepolis. While at first she despises the constraints on her freedoms put in place by
the government and her family, after struggling on her own with virtually unlimited freedom she
goes back to the more restrictive environment in Iran. Satrapi argues that while we should not allow
extreme government control of freedom, so restraints made by parents and other family members is
crucial in the development and bettering of a person's upbringing. With too strong of governement
restriction of freedom, one has no outlet of self expression or individuality and with too much
freedom Satrapi is unable to create a safe environment for herself and remains emotionally unstable
and she therefore argues that an environment with some restrictions is best. Americans tend to
advocate for absolute
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The Women Of The World War II
Freedom A bronze life like statue of a solider, standing up straight, with a proud grin on his face.
Alongside of him, is a young boy holding the solider right hand with a look of admiration for his
hero. There attire appears to be from the twentieth century. To be more specific, they seem to
stepped right out of the World War II time period. The solider is wearing a U.S. Army M–1943
Uniform, which consist of a M1 helmet. He is wearing M–43 Field Jacket, with regular field
trousers for pants, along with his trousers. He is wearing an M–1943 Combat Service Boots. He is
also welding a M1 Garand rifle. He is wearing a combat belt, to the right of on the waist of the
solider is a water pouch, and to the left is what it seems to be a two ... Show more content on
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Almost every time I walk or drive near the courthouse, these two statues stand out to me the most.
Being a history lover for myself, it makes me feel blessed that the freedoms we do have In America.
When I look at the young boy's face there is an emotion this boy captures, it gives me the very same
feeling I had when I was growing up. It was the feeling of having a hero in life, a role model you
could even say and for me that was my parents. This young boy was looking up to the man as a hero
or maybe even as father figure as well. As Christians we too have a comparison with how this young
boy looks to the solider. We look up to our Heavenly Father as a hero, or even a Savior. 1 John 3:16
of The King James Version says "Here by perceive we the love of God, because he laid down his
life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren."
When we look at the death count of World War II there were over 400,000 American soldiers that
died. And the soldiers did this for us, they laid down their lives for our freedom so that we may live.
When I look at the two statues, it reminds of three things. One, to never take this freedom that we
have in America for granted. Two, it reminds what the Sacrifices that had to be made for our
freedom. Most importantly three, it gives me a reminder of what Jesus did on the cross so we could
be spiritually free. We Americans take for granted our well known freedoms, forgetting that people
in
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Should Young Adults Be Forced To War?
Do you think young adults should be forced to war? In years past, upon high school graduation,
every American Male was selected randomly by birthdate to serve in the military. For many years
now, however, America has had an all–volunteer military that has worked very well. Even so, today
some Congressmen insist that the United States should adopt a policy of mandatory military service
following high school graduation. There are many disadvantages to mandatory military service. Not
all recently graduated teenagers are mature enough to be responsible for our country's wellbeing.
According to school psychologist Michael Thompson, "making the commitment to serve that time
in the military should be each individual's choice." If young adults do not choose to serve, they will
be unmotivated and unreliable in the military, and their lack of focus will endanger their comrades.
Thompson also states that "the United States has the most powerful military in the world because it
is made up of volunteer–men and women who have a desire to be there." If people are put in the war
and do not give it their all, the United States will be less powerful. In ... Show more content on
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American politician and physician Ron Paul said, "Freedom is defined by the ability of citizens to
live without government interference." If this is a free country, people should be able to choose
whether or not to serve in the military. The article "Forcing Your Belief on Others Is Not Religious
Freedom" Asserts that "As Americans we are guaranteed the right of freedom, but that freedom is
limited so that it does not infringe upon others." Forcing others to give up a part of their life to
satisfy someone else is not freedom, and they should use their freedom however they choose. In
addition, using one's personal freedoms should not infringe on others; therefore, the United States
should not require mandatory military
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A Summer That Shocked The Nation
Dest 1
Chris Dest
HIST 104A
1964: a Summer That Shocked the Nation
The 1960's was a time like no other in American history. Racial tension between African Americans
and white, middle class citizens had plagued the country. Animosity towards African Americans was
aggressive throughout the south and did not show signs of letting up. Alongside rising racial
tensions, fear of communism put many on edge, which gave Americans more of a reason to use
blacks as a scapegoat to blame for occurring issues. At the time, white Americans in the south
perceived African Americans as inferior, regardless of if they were technically "free". The strong
contempt towards the black community lead to widespread oppression of African Americans ...
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Doing this gave the African American community more power and voice. Standing united allowed
these activist groups to implement their individual goals and place them all under the same branch.
One major goal included black voter registration lead by Bob Moses and Tom Gaither (44). They
believed that blacks had been disenfranchised by the Jim crow laws and other laws hindering their
voter registration abilities. Voter registration forms made it nearly impossible for uneducated black
Americans to register, often using trick questions (41). A majority of blacks did not feel comfortable
registering to vote due to the potential repercussions. They would often be persecuted and harassed
by locals and often were blacklisted or outed in the local newspapers if attempted to register. The act
of fear instilled in many blacks throughout the south prevented them from registering. Moses and
Gaither along with SNCC volunteers, helped this issue by going to local communities throughout
Mississippi, motivating locals and the community by building local leaders. SNCC activist Charles
McLaurin even stated "By getting the people together they will see that they are not alone..." (49).
Going into communities and motivating locals to register helped many blacks overcome their fears
and aided the "snowball effect" of black voter registration. Creation of local leaders gave hope to
many black southerners showing them that
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Huckleberry Finn American Experience Essay
The Flight to Freedom
"Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves", left the mouth of the once
prominent advocate for the abolishment of slavery, former president of the United States, and
revolution pioneer, Abraham Lincoln, in his quest for the independence of slaves throughout the
nation. Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn expresses the American experience and
captures the same idea of acquiring freedom, both physical and mental escape, through the
characters Huckleberry Finn and Jim, who both physically escape their dangerous and threatening
living arrangements, and the raft that aides Huckleberry and Jim in their quest and exploration of
themselves and a new life. The concept of the "American ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
This coincides with the idea of an "American experience" for Huck as he is considered "hip" and
daring for leaving town and his stagnant lifestyle in pursuit something greater, something new,
something that young adults like him would not have considered during that time. As he escapes
without direction Huck encounters Jim, a slave who has also fled his captivity in pursuit of
liberation. Huck befriends the slave and the two venture down the Mississippi River, embarking on
a journey in which they face violence, distress and episodes of lost hope. A large change that we the
readers view during the time Huck and Jim spent together on the river, is Huck's perception of
slavery. After conversing with and getting to know Jim, his values, beliefs and dreams, Huck begins
to truly believe that slaves like Jim are not as society paints them to be, that they too are humans
with feelings and deserve rights equal to a white man. It is through Huck's change of heart and
development of character that Twain suggests a new way of thinking for future generations of
Americans, as they experience more places, people and cultures.
Twain also employs the character Jim to convey the "American experience", despite him falling
short of many opportunities that free, white Americans were able to have during this time.
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Young Americans For Freedom Analysis
In contrast, the American liberal ideologues of the time seemed to be swinging more and more to the
left even in the face of the now all–powerful Soviet Union from which Rand had previously
escaped. While Eugene Debs ultimately never achieved a meaningful socialist coalition, the labor
movements of the early 20th century had continuously scored major victories in establishing unions
and increasingly stringent labor standards. By 1932, the Great Depression had destroyed much of
the earned material wealth of millions of Americans and left those same Americans with little in the
way of opportunity. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a cousin of former President Teddy Roosevelt and
an ardent liberal, beat the beleaguered incumbent Herbert Hoover in the ... Show more content on
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Indeed, he was that conservative; however, it was not the time for a Goldwater conservative in
America. Goldwater was seen as an unhinged maniac who would lead us into a nuclear apocalypse,
as popularized by an infamous Johnson campaign commercial. Even Nixon (who was an actual
unhinged maniac) and Ford (who wasn't) would fail to claim leadership even as conservative
Republicans began winning more and more. It would be a former actor by the name of Ronald
Reagan who would ultimately become the conservative Godsend that Buckley and his ilk so desired.
In his famous speech in support of Goldwater, A Time for Choosing, Reagan said "You and I have
the courage to say to our enemies, "There is a price we will not pay." "There is a point beyond
which they must not advance." And this –– this is the meaning in the phrase of Barry Goldwater's
"peace through strength." Winston Churchill said, "The destiny of man is not measured by material
computations. When great forces are on the move in the world, we learn we're spirits –– not
animals." And he said, "There's something going on in time and space, and beyond time and space,
which, whether we like it or not, spells duty." Using his skills as an excellent orator, Reagan would
immediately become one of the most lauded conservative voices in America – although Goldwater
would lose the election Johnson in a landslide, Reagan would use his speech to
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Flappers In The 1920's
The 1920s was a period of revolution and liberation for women with the rise of "the new woman",
who experienced changes in both appearance and attitude, and the reconsideration of the purpose of
sex. The 1920s gave birth to the flapper, the type of woman who rejected the traditional prudish
values of the Victorian Era. Merriam–Webster defines a flapper as "a young woman; specifically: a
young woman of the period of World War I and the following decade who showed freedom from
conventions (as in conduct)." Flappers started to emerge because of the shift in the role of women in
society. Women held more political power because of the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment
and more and more women were entering the labor force. Women had more ... Show more content
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The Roaring Twenties was a time of change and innovation with the rise in new technology. Even
though electricity was available to Americans before the 1920s only a small percentage of American
household had electricity. By the height of the Roaring Twenties about two thirds of American
households had electricity. With the rise of electricity came the popular household items such as the
electric vacuum cleaner and the automatic washing machine. As the twenties proceeded the
automobile because extremely popular. The young generation used the automobile to escape from
the watchful eye of the older generations. Often, the automobile was used for scandalous meetings
between lovers. Another innovation of the Roaring Twenties is film. Film became one of the main
sources of entertainment for Americans during the 1920s. "By the mid–1920s movie theatres were
selling 50 million tickets each week, a sum equal to roughly half the US population" (Zeitz). The
movies theatre not only served as a source of entertainment, but the theaters also served as a
classroom for the young generation. The young adults learned about love and sex is scandalous
movies such as Flaming Youth. Movie theatres also served as a source of news and a place for
propaganda and advertisements. Radio also experienced a vast expansion during the 1920s. Radio
sparked a radical change the country's awareness. News such as election results could be
broadcasted live across the nation so that citizens could be more aware of what was going on in the
country. Radio also provided a source of entertainment by broadcasting sporting events like the
World Series. Radio contributed to liberalism by broadcasting "'race music', 'hillbilly' sounds, and
ethnic recordings" into
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Radicalism In The 1960's
The 1960's were a decade of radicalism but it also had a conservative side. The students and the
youth had a big role in the 1960's. They had a big influence in the society and political. "Young
people played an important role in the movements for social change during the 1960s."
(lessonsite.com) The students' actions in 1960's were a major changed in the social and fight racism
and poverty, increase student rights. The students also belief in democracy or the idea that
Americans should decide or have a word in the major economic, political, and social questions to
form the country. They belief that working together and be democratic they can do anything and
reach a change for the nation. The students' hoped and looked for a change. They ... Show more
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These documents help in the 1960's to have or get better living and it continue does because we can
always go back to history and see how we can make it better. The authors of Port Huron Statement
mention "democracy of individual Participation" (Give Me Liberty 2nd edition by Forner, Eric)
(Page 999). They mean that we can create their own destiny. This idea shows today on how the
economic works today. How an individual can buy or sell in the market at Wall Street. You just need
one person to decide like that. Democracy is still today's big part of this nation. The statement also
links in today's political ideas in how the tuition keep increasing for students and how back in the
day they fight for a better living for the students. We still have some problems of money in colleges.
The debt is a big issue in today's life for students. Regardless of the help that we received as
students from the government, like the grants we still have a big issues about money and racism.
Racism is also another big matter in today's
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Freedom: Sharon and Port Hurom Statement Essay
How did the young conservatives who wrote the Sharon Statement understand freedom?
The Young Americans for Freedom was from a conservative point of view. It affirmed they
considered to an affirmation of God's' will, affirming their beliefs in individual free will and liberty;
the inextricable bond between economic freedom; the purpose of the government protecting
freedom through preservation of internal order, national defense, and the administration of justice;
the genius of the Constitution (especially the clause reserving power of the states); and the market
economy as the single system compatible with freedom . . .Communism is named as the named as
the greatest threat to democracy. (1) Despite the libertarians eventually being ... Show more content
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It is not easy, and it is unpleasant, to adduce statistics evidencing the cultural superiority of White
over Negro: but it is a fact that obtrudes, one that cannot be hidden by ever–so–busy egalitarians and
anthropologists."(4)
"National Review believes that the South's premises are correct... It is more important for the
community, anywhere in the world, to affirm and live by civilized standards, than to bow to the
demands of the numerical majority."
"The South confronts one grave moral challenge. It must not exploit the fact of Negro backwardness
to preserve the Negro as a servile class... Let the South never permit itself to do this. So long as it is
merely asserting the right to impose superior mores for whatever period it takes to affect a genuine
cultural equality between the races, and so long as it does so by humane and charitable means, the
South is in step with civilization, as is the Congress that permits it to function." (5)
What do the authors of the Port Huron Statement appear to mean by participatory democracy?
The SDS wanted to participate in their own destinies, and to get away from what they saw as serve
limitations in an undemocratic society. They wanted "simplicity in registration and voting,
unfettered dominance of wealthy, property requirements, literacy tests and poll taxes." (6))
Individual people were no dependent solely on themselves, but as part of community, and being part
of
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The Revolution Of The 1960 ' S
The Young in the 1960's
Many people believe the 1960s, were the golden age but, contrary, by the end of the decade, it
seemed like the The United States was falling apart. That could be one of the reason why different
groups were growing with new ideas, demands and of course many reforms. Student activists
became more and more radical. They protested over colleges, massive antiwar demonstrations and
occupied various public places to make their revolutionary ideas visible and to be heard. In 1960s,
the new radicalism took place. New groups of students became to gather, such as the Young
Americans for Freedom (YAF) and Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) two years later. Both
groups were viewed as the leading edge of a new radicalism. These group believed they had a new
route to greater freedom. The students documented and summarized their beliefs and what some
called the New Left. They believed the participatory democracy was the real social change. By the
mid–1960s, facing growing opposition among the young to the war in Vietnam, they were viewed as
a rebellion force. They became more militant and active in social issues and politics. Some
demonstrations were violent and even people died. The young group became a strong force in The
United Stated and, also other countries. Also, changed their physical appearance by growing their
hair, used drugs and, practice "free love." In the beginning of the 1960's these small groups of
student started to emerged and rapidly
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The American Liberty And Freedom
As time goes on our ways of life begin to change however, the ideas and past events still remain.
Throughout history we have seen how American liberty and freedom is always centered on the
dominant white male image. As time continues on those of minority decent have had work twice as
hard to receive the same level of equality as all whites both male and female. Women and African
Americans have struggled much more because back then white men believed that they couldn't be
trusted and that they were not worthy of holding power. The inequality of American liberties and
freedom has been displayed recently when a white male cop attacked a young African American
student. She wasn't able to express her freedom because she had to adhere to the cop that was
dominant towards her. Women had to work so hard to acquire their freedom and this was displayed
through the Seneca Falls Convention. Elizabeth Cady Stanton wanted her voice to be heard and she
spoke about how women deserved to be as free as men. She stated how government created
"disgraceful laws as give man the power to chastise and imprison his wife, to take the wages which
she earns, the property in which she inherits..." This clearly shows how back in the past women
weren't equal to men and they really didn't have any liberties or really any freedom. The men were
of power and basically anything they said was what was right. Going back to the case of the young
African girl, her voice wasn't being heard. All throughout the
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Persuasive Essay On The American Dream
America is the land of the free, home of the brave. A saying integrated into songs, and used in many
American's conversations throughout their lives. A phrase that shaped one of the main ideas in the
"American Dream." America is the land of opportunity, prosperity, and freedom with honest hard
work. But, how many Americans are free when they are forced to exploit themselves just to make it
through each day without starving? Every day, thousands of helpless Americans find themselves
chained to a lifestyle that strips them of their human and American rights. However, the ones
depriving these people of their chance at living out the American Dream are not the people getting
reprimanded. It is the victims of human trafficking that are often ... Show more content on
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Unfortunately, that only ended the slavery of African Americans, not the sex trafficking industry that
has trapped too many Americans. The victims of sex trafficking lose the opportunities the American
Dream has to offer the minute they are exploited and sold. They are unable to start a business, buy
land, go to college, start a family, or even have a friend. The opportunity of a real relationship is
unattainable because the only people they know want their body and nothing more. The opportunity
of a potential job is even stripped from Americans, with the example of the latest news in
Hollywood. Women struggle to get a role unless they use their body, throwing all rights and respect
out the window. Men such as Harvey Weinstein, Kevin Spacey, and Matt Zimmerman all lost their
jobs and America's respect for sexually assaulting and raping women. Instead of women working
diligently and earning their spot in a movie, men like the ones listed before demand sexual favors of
actresses in order to be cast in a movie. The American Dream's fundamental idea is that anyone can
achieve their goals through hard work. There is always an opportunity for success through hard
work, but for these actresses and victims of sex trafficking there is no opportunity. They are forced
to use their bodies in order to obtain anything in their lives. This violates more than just the
American Dream, it defiles the Constitution and what the American government was built upon. The
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Who Is Abigail Adams Struggle For Equality In Colonial...
Consumed with the desire to gain liberty and equality, Americans fought for changes in their society
resulting in the American War for Independence. Unfortunately the fight for independence did not
bring liberty and equality to all Americans. Native Americans, African slaves, and women continued
under the control of those with more money and power, which mainly included white, property
owning men. As time went on the young American Republic continued to fight for ideals
independence eventually making a revolutionary change in the way American's live. Soon after the
American War for Independence, the Declaration of Independence was written and amendments to
the Constitution were made in order bring America into a new season of change in government. ...
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Most countries during the Colonial Era were ruled by a monarchy claiming only one religion to be
true and enforcing that religion on the people under their rule. Some of the first settlers came from
Britain, where Catholicism was forced upon each citizen, whether it was what they believed or not.
Religious freedom was a rare liberty the settlers longed for, causing them to leave their home
country to come to the new world in hopes of gaining the freedom they desired. Yet, even though
the Europeans resented having a ruler tell them what religions were "wrong" and what religion they
had to be believe, various groups of settlers still came to America and told the Indians their religion
was wrong and forcefully attempted to convert the Indians to their own beliefs. It was many years
after they arrived that the settlers finally established an official law giving religious freedom to all
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Analysis: Is The American Dream Still Possible?
America. Land of opportunity and freedom. Home of the American dream. But, is it all still real? Is
the American dream still possible or is it just that? A dream? The American dream is the hope for all
Americans and immigrants. It's the ideal that you can 'make it big' in America. That if you try hard
enough, you can achieve anything. America still provides access to the American dream and we are
still able to achieve it due to the opportunities that America offers and the undying American spirit
in every American out there. Throughout history, Americans have always had traits that were
common to the typical 'American dream success stories'. In the article "is the American dream still
possible?", the author writes, " self–reliance and sacrifice. Most of those interviewed display
qualities common to American success stories: determination, flexibility, pragmatism, willingness to
work hard and especially self–reliance." The author explains how the majority of Americans have
the traits to achieve the American dream, but are ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
William Zinsser says in his story, " the right to fail","Failure isn't fatal. Countless people have had a
bout with it and come out stronger as a result. Many have even come out famous."Zinsser explains
that throughout American history, the people who succeed are typically the ones that also failed.
And those opportunities are given to us as freedoms. The American dream is still possible through
the freedoms provided. The author, Joseph Bruchac, states in his poem "Ellis island" that, " Beyond
the red brink of ellis island where the two slovak children who became my grandparents waited the
long days of quarantine...". In the poem, the author explains how many people, including his own
grandparents, waited for long times in even longer lines to have access to the freedoms of America.
But not every part of America has supported the American
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Fear And The Forced Evacuation
Fear and the Forced Evacuation of the Japanese–Americans How do explain something that is
completely in the wrong as ok? Why can people, organizations and even governments make
irrational decision over and over again? The United States prides itself on it's ability to be a free
country and support freedom of religion and freedom of speech but throughout history their are
numerous accounts of the United States going against it's own beliefs and treating it's people in
terrible ways. One example of the United States going against it's pride in equality and rhetoric of
democracy and acting in ways of exclusion and inequality is during World War II when the United
States forced evacuation of the Japanese to internment camps. The memoir, "Looking ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
When they pulled the nearly 120,000 Japanese–Americans the government was acting on fear. The
government was not only scared of a future attack but also the government feared the difference in
cultures. The Japanese lifestyle was significantly different than they popular American lifestyle. The
Japanese did speak a different language and did believe in a different religion. They ate different
foods and played different games. Many did strive to enjoy the ways of American culture as well, "I
grew up playing hopscotch and jacks, learning kendo and ikebana. I studied U.S. history at school
and Japanese on Saturday. For breakfast I ate scrambled eggs and mochi. Dinner could include fried
chicken and sushi," (11). The Japanese strived to be both but the government devastatingly didn't
understand. The government feared the different culture and beliefs and their possibilities they had
for the country. "Most Japanese were highly productive, successful people in whatever work they
pursued. As a result they became the brunt of some non–Japanese people's fears, envy and prejudice.
The war provided the excuse for removing the Japanese from the West Coast and to eliminate
competition and literally take over whatever gains the Japanese had made," (92). Placing the
Japanese–Americans into interment camps proved the governments fear of the Japanese culture
even though the
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Social Movement Change
Kesha Jones
Social Movements as Agents of Change
The United States has transitioned since Reconstruction to a more diverse nation. Women defeated
the overwhelming behavior on what society thinks. African Americans experienced obstacles to
finally gain freedom. The different minority groups movements helped races, for example the
Native Americans and Hispanics stand up for their rights. Social movements helped form the United
States to a more equivalent country.
The feminist movement wanted to end discrimination and gain equal rights for women. Until 1964,
women could not work, dance, drink, smoke, use birth control or vote. When the Nineteenth
Amendment passed in the Roaring 20s, women had the privilege to vote. During the 1950s most
women stayed home to take care of the children and made great wives to their husbands. Shortly
through the years and struggles for women, Betty Friedan started a group called National
Organization for Women. The organization helped end job discrimination and legalize abortion.
(NOW) also went to Congress and the Supreme Court for pro–equality laws. Overall the women
remained tired of the way society thinks women should act, however the organizations helped them
get to where they are today. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Not only did women and African Americans battle for their rights, Hispanics and Native Americans
had enough as well. The American Indian Movement advanced red power and the Indians went to
federal courts armed with copies of their treaties demanding their freedom. Cezar Chavez, the
founder of United Farm Workers, dedicated his life to help farm workers with the poor working
conditions for the Hispanics. With these diverse developments Hispanics and Native Americans
gained freedom and rights along with others in the Civil Rights period in
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Slavery Is The Fourth Of July Analysis
Freedom, this essential term present in the vocabulary of all Americans, is one of the most
distinctive founding ideas that shaped the national identity. This idea of freedom undoubtedly
defines America's past and present identity. Whether it's the fight for freedom from the British's
oppression, the fight for freedom of African Americans from the institution of slavery or the
unalienable rights of freedom of speech and petition, freedom is deeply embedded in the fabric that
makes up America. This term, freedom, never had a fixed meaning or definition. Instead, it has been
the subject of conflict, disagreement and struggle throughout American History. There has been a
constant debate over the meaning of freedom and it has given rise to different meanings constructed
on almost all levels of society. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He argues that the institution of slavery is needed for the freedom of the white working class.
Freedom is not only a constant battle between slavery and workers but also a constant topic of
minorities and even women. Although freedom was not the direct message being expressed in "A
Second Peep at Factory Life", the author in this Mills Document would argue for freedom in a more
women's right perspective. The actual definition and meaning of freedom has been challenged
through American History and has deepened its importance for the United States over
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Freedom Of Speech Rights In The United States
America is a nation that takes pride in its ability to protect the fundamental rights of their citizens
such as those mentioned in the 1st amendment. Unfortunately, that was not always the case. During
the Lochner era, the right to a freedom of contract was considered a fundamental right. While rights
such as freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and voting, were considered non–fundamental. It
wasn't until the New Deal era that the court changed the standard to be that rights such as freedom
of religion, speech, and voting, were fundamental rights. It is the New Deal standard that is the
foundation for our freedom of speech right today in America (GGW, 2017). In other places, the
standards are not the same, such as Germany. Both countries grant the right of freedom of speech,
but speech is regulated and justified differently. In this paper, the focus will be on how the ruling
and justification in the German case "Auschwitz lie" differs and compares to American
constitutional law regarding freedom of speech.
In "Auschwitz lie," a case was brought in front of the court regarding the freedom of speech right
under Basic Law, which is the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Germany. The National
Democratic Party of Germany (NDP) was hosting an event, and had decided to invite the historian
David Irving. The NDP could host the event, but was obligated to adhere to specific conditions. The
specific condition was that there could not be any statement regarding the persecution
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Counterculture In 1960s
In the 1960s a new group of young, long haired and wild people began to form in San Francisco,
California and soon spread throughout the rest of the country and then developed around the world.
Its origins may be traced to European social movement in the 19th and early 20th century such as
Bohemians, and the influence of Eastern religion and spirituality. From around 1967, its
fundamental ethos including harmony with nature, communal living, artistic experimentation
particularly in music, and the widespread use of recreational drugs spread around the world during
the counterculture of the 1960s, which has become closely associated with the subculture. These
people were given the name known as "hippies" they were defined as "a usually young ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In October, 1967 over fifty thousand hippies gathered in Washington D.C. to make a statement
against the war by trying to levitated the Pentagon building, headquarters of the U.S. Department of
Defense. Music was a big key to hippies a concert named Woodstock Festival began in a rural town
of Bethel, New York from August 15 to August 18, 1969 a man named Michael Lang is a musical
concert promoter, producer and artist manager who is best known as the cocreator of the Woodstock
music and art festival in 1969 he promoted Jimi Hendrix known as " American rock singer and
songwriter" he was the headline of the Woodstock Festival in 1969 and highest paid performer.
Another is Janis Lyn Joplin she an "American rock singer and songwriter" one of the most
successful and widely known female rock star of her era. The ground area was the max of the 600–
acre dairy farm. Woodstock Festival was a three day of pop and rock concert that turned out to be
the most popular music event in history it becomes a symbol of the hippie movement of the 1960s.
At first, many things went wrong people didn't want any hippies and drug addicts coming to the
original location. About two months before the concert new site had to be found but lucky
organizers found a 600–acre farm which was perfect also the organizers expected about 50,000
people but as the date came nearer it became clear that far more people wanted to be at the event. A
few days before the festival began hundreds of thousands of pop and rock fans were on their way to
Woodstock. There were not enough gates and tickets were checked also the fans made holes in the
fences so lots of people just walked in. About 300,000 to 500,000 people were at the concert.
Having 500,000 people at Woodstock festival only 2 people die. One person died of a drug overdose
and the other die in a sleeping bag
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Female Sexuality And The Paradox Of Sexual Freedom By...
Freedom, opportunities, and information are some features of this modern society. Clearly, humans
are now having a very different life compared to the past. Along with this well–developed world,
people get more chances to express how they think, do what they want, and love who they love.
Especially young people, they become more independent and are capable of living their own lives.
However, while society provides people a lot of benefits, it actually makes their lives even more
complex at the same time by leaving them pressures and confusions of who they really are. In her
essay, "Selections from Hard to Get:Twenty–Something Women and the Paradox of Sexual
Freedom," Leslie Bell mentions that while in this new–in between developmental period American
twenty–something women have more freedom and opportunities about their sexual lives than
previous generations, they are struggling with the paradoxes of their relationships and desires. Bell
suggests that social expectations and culture guidelines, which are conventions of female sexuality
and stereotypes of being a good girl, prevent these young women from pursuing their sexual desires
and limiting their relationships with men. However, even these women have chosen the way they
live and what kind of sexual life they want in order to be bad girls to break those old rules, they
ended with losing their identities. In general, female sexuality is impacted more by establishing a
women's identity rather than clinging on
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Essay On The Most Challenged Groups In The 1920s
Most Challenged Groups in the 1920s During the nineteen twenties, most Americans experienced a
higher increase in economic status. There was high growth in many industries leading to the
availability of new jobs. With the increase in jobs, salaries for most citizens increased, and many
more people are employed. As the rate of employment increased, the lives of many citizens
improved and they could easily cater for the basic needs. The growth of economy gave room for
changes in the social life of a good percentage of Americans. After World War, young soldiers also
returned with new culture making them adopt new traditions. Higher education level and the
freedom given to women to occupy jobs in industries also led to challenges in obeying traditional
activities. All these changes and freedom made the youths challenge the traditional social patterns
through the following ways ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Many youths, both men, and women started to challenge the traditional social patterns. Young
women no longer saw anything good with longer dresses that hid their body shape, decided to style
up, and began to wear new–fashioned dresses that exposed some parts of their bodies. Many young
women started drinking alcohol with adults in public and smoking cigarettes for the first time.
Instead of participating and listening to the normal traditional music, young people changed their
perception of music and started listening to jazz. They abandoned their traditional dances that were
embraced by their parents and grandparents and adopted modern type of dancing, which involved
too much holder. The film industry also improved, though it was incorporated immorality such as
sex films, production of sex tapes, and books that lead to homosexuality and early engagement in
sex, which was not allowed traditionally. Hence, young citizens mostly challenged traditional social
patterns in the
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Right Makes Left. On September 11Th, 1960, The Founding
Right Makes Left On September 11th, 1960, the founding members of the Young Americans for
Freedom (YAF) published their basic ideologies of in their "Sharon Statement." Two years later on
the June of 1962, members of the Students for a Democratic Society at their retreat published their
political manifesto in a paper known as the Port Huron Statement. Despite their differing political
views, both political youth groups centered their criticism on the same target: the American
government. An analysis of both documents revealed that both believed that positive change could
only come by the youth, because only they saw the real flaws of the current system and have the
ability to make a difference. A brief background of both the YAF and the ... Show more content on
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Both were formed by university students during a time of young political activism. There was also a
generational understanding of 1960. This recognition was clearly understood by the writers of the
Port Huron Statement when they wrote, "Our work is guided by the sense that we might be the last
generation in the experiment with living. But we are minority." Hence for the SDS members, they
not only felt they were the age group that knew best the turbulent times, but they were also the only
ones who fathomed the issues behind the chaos. Likewise, the writers behind the Sharon Statement
stated that "In this time of moral and political crisis, it is the responsibility of the youth of America
to affirm certain eternal truths." It was up to the young conservatives to point out the issues of
contemporary America and call for a return to the universal principles that the country was
supposedly founded upon. Both manifestos recognized a crisis happening in the US and sought to
rectify their truths politically, economically and socially. Moreover, the YAF and SDS both argued
from a similar point of view: that the government and its policies were the main instigators for the
political, social and economic issues during the early 1960s. The YAF saw the government as
"acting beyond [their] rightful functions" and thus has reduced the American concept of liberty and
freedom. Yet the Sharon Statement associated these political intrusions to the government's role in
the state economy.
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Student Non Violent Coordinating Committee
Young people throughout history have been drawn to social movements. These social movements
often included marches and non–violent protesting, but not all of them included violence at the
hands of police or nights where sleep is impossible because of fear. The young people involved in
Freedom Summer in 1964 would change the course of history, but not without significant sacrifices.
Freedom Summer or the Mississippi Summer Project was the brainchild of the Student Non–Violent
Coordinating Committee or SNCC. The project had four main goals, to expand African American
voter registration, to organize a legally constituted "Freedom Democratic Party" that will challenge
the whites–only Mississippi Democratic Party, to establish "freedom schools" and to open
community centers where legal and medical assistance were available. In order to achieve these
goals SNCC specifically recruited 800 white students under the age of 21. "Most of the volunteers
were white students who had participated in civil rights activities in the North...The fact that the
volunteers were expected to forgo summer jobs, to pay for their own transportation, and to provide
their own bond money in the event of arrest ensured that affluent students predominated." These
students joined the already solid African American activist core in the South. The African American
staff members who worked with the white volunteers often felt ambivalent about the need for white
people to be hurt during the movement to get
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1960's Sexual Revolution
The sexual revolution of the 1960's was a time of great importance to modern America. The changes
that occurred across America changed our country as a whole, its influence spread from LA to New
York to the 'Heartland of America', Lawrence Kansas. This revolution occurred at a critical point in
world history as well. A new type of society formed with soldiers returning from WWII and people
began to incorporate themselves with those who matched their identity and not just those
geographically near them. People were frustrated and they wanted their voice to be heard, and now
they had a group of citizens who would back them up and help them in their revolution. American
ideals changed drastically in the twenty years that followed World War two ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
All young men and women became unified following world war II. At the time, many residents
became more connected publicly and tuned in to the world around them, supporting evidence being
that "nine out of ten of Lawrence's residents had a radio."(13), the public became much more unified
through the war and all young men and women realized that they disagreed with their parents
values, from the war, to politics, and especially to sex. These same young men and women were
empowered by each other to make a change to society. They knew that they were the future of
America and that the values of their parents were of little importance to them. They saw the hate and
bloodshed and evil against those they valued equal and that sparked the revolt. A young man states
in the Oread daily, "you became defensive of your absolutes. We became defensive of our
idealism... And we became ANGRY!" America was indeed in the midst of a revolution, a stark
cultural disagreement between old and young. This uprising from the young against the ideals, the
values, the cultural laws put in place in America for centuries, truly made it a sexual
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Younger Generation Movement
From 1946–1964 there was a sudden growth in population known as the baby boomers. There was a
rise of the younger generation that skyrocketed and made a large population of the United States.
"Tom Hayden and Students For a Democratic Society" from The Movements of The New Left: A
Brief History With Documents and "Young Americans For Freedom" from The Rise of
Conservatism in America have many similarities and differences. Both articles aim to get the voices
from the younger generation (at the time) to stand up for their rights and beliefs. They were going to
be the change in the generation to come. They were in it together, but from the two articles the
perspectives were different. Both groups were looking for their voices to be heard and influential ...
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This was written in 1962, two years after The Sharon Statement was written. The Port Huron
Statement was a rallying cry from The Students for The Democratic Society. Directly from The Port
Huron Statement of August 1962 it is written, "We are the people of this generation bred in at least
modest comfort, housed now in universities, looking uncomfortable to the world we inherit." To
simplify, "We" means the students from the Democratic society. These students (younger
generation) are the future of the world. They are what will be the world in the future. They
articulated the fundamental problems of the American Society and laid out a radical vision for a
better future. "...that decision–making of basic social consequence be carried on by public
groupings; that politics be seen positively...." The students from the democratic society believed in
strength of the government. They believed that the younger generation had a huge influence, but in a
social setting. All individuals had power but to make worth of it, the government had to be the
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Ballad Of Birmingham By Dudley Randall
In the 1960s racial discrimination, segregation, and race–inspired violence was at its worst. Jim
Crow laws kept white and African American people separate in public, the Ku Klux, Klan forced
African Americans to fear for their lives every minute of every day, and absolutely nothing was
happening to change these injustices. African Americans participated in thousands of nonviolent
boycotts, freedom marches, and protests and nothing was ever changed until the morning of
September 15, 1963. On that morning, a bomb, made of dynamite, forever changed the lives of the
citizens attending the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. Four young black girls
died in the bombing, inspiring poet Dudley Randall to write his powerful poem, "Ballad of
Birmingham." Through his poetry, Randall influenced change in the Civil Rights movement, and by
owning the largest printing press of the 1960s, played a huge role in the Black Arts Movement.
Dudley Randall's ballad, "Ballad of Birmingham," expresses his feelings of helplessness and sorrow
after the tragic and senseless 16th Street Baptist Church bombing using irony, imagery, and tone to
allow his readers to understand what life was like for African Americans in America in the 1960s.
Irony in "Ballad of Birmingham" is found throughout the poem starting in the very beginning of the
poem because one would expect the mother to be the one to want to go to the freedom march, not a
young girl. Also irony is present in the poem when the
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Explain What Political Economic And Social Freedoms Did...
In 1850 The Northern free blacks started to become more free.There was a slave population in the
U.S which was 476,000. Slaves are becoming more free in voting and political freedom. What
political, economic, and social freedoms did free blacks have in the North? In The North the free
northern blacks had some political, economic, and social freedoms. By the 1830's Free northern
blacks had a few political freedoms. . This is because the states population voted for this reasons for
blacks to vote and also male jury duty. The only state that voted for black males to vote and do male
jury duty was Massachusetts. There was 5 states that had voting restricted and 6 other states voted
no for black male voting. The proves why we should all just
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Why We Cant Wait Rhetorical Questions
In 1861 America had a civil war in order to free African Americans from slavery. Thirty five years
later, the Supreme Court case Plessy vs. Furgeson ruled "separate but equal." However, in the
1960's, the races were separate but far from equal. In Martin Luther King Jr.'s book "Why We Cant
Wait" he uses rhetorical questions, pathos, and diction of the word freedom in order to persuade
people to make a change in the way African Americans were being treated. First, king uses
rhetorical questions in order to get people to think about the way Africans Americans were being
treated. He uses the example of two young children asking, "Why does misery constantly haunt the
Negro?" How bad do things need to be for this question to cross a young child's mind? This
question is asked by children in order to make people think of how badly Africans are being treated,
and persuade them to make a change. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He tells the story of a young African girl in order to make the audience feel sympathy. He writes,
"She can no longer attend the all–Negro school in her neighborhood because her mother died only
recently after a car crash. Neighbors say if the ambulance hadn't come so late to take her to the all
Negro hospital the mother might still be alive." This story is told so the audience will understand the
blatant disregard for African American lives. It is told to make people realize that a change needs to
be made and
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Definition Essay Freedom
Freedom is often viewed by having the right to be independent or to be "free from servitude,
constraint, inhibition, and liberty" (Oxford Dictionary). The word freedom derived from a
"Germanic" culture. Freedom has a different meaning to different people; for example kids, adults
and different races. Socially, politically, and religiously the word freedom fits into different
categories with different meanings depending on who thinks about the word. Freedom has a wide
range of definitions that should be specifically stated in one that addresses the public in one way so
everyone knows the same definition and does not cause confusion. Socially, the word freedom from
a kid's point of view can mean that they have the right or "independence" ... Show more content on
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When it comes to politics, people become very serious. Kids do not have much of a say in politics
when they are younger than 18, but once they turn 18, they can vote to elect someone to run office.
The problem with this is most young teens today do not know what is actually being said in office.
Teens think it would be "funny" or "cool" to vote for someone when the whole world could crash.
The word freedom effects teens in this way because they think "oh, I have the right to be free and
have free speech" which is true but that statement can not be taken lightly. Most young teens do not
have a clue about politics and vote anyways causing the voting pole to increase towards one person
running in office and it could be where that person is not favorited by the older generation. Adults
on the other hand are from an older generation who has deeper knowledge of politics. The word
freedom for adults politically could mean that they can vote for who they want to because they are
"free" to do so. Having two generations of people and different races politically can cause problems
with the freedom to vote. Also, African Americans have a different view on freedom politically.
African Americans can have very much the same view of an adult as well as having their own
independent view. In this case politically the word freedom means anyone can have the right to vote
and have free speech. Religious beliefs can often affect the word freedom as
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White Suburbia In The 1960's
The social and cultural movements of the 1960s began to upset the traditional "norms" of gender
constructs, family and social structures, racial biases, and portrayals of white suburbia that existed
in the 1950s. Many social movements were taking place in the US while the Vietnam war going on.
In early 1960 black college students in Greensboro, North Carolina sat in on a "white's only" lunch
counter, as similar sit–ins began to happen in other southern cities too. One year later the Freedom
Rides that supported integration in transportation, started taking place on buses. In late 1963, men
and women gathered in Washington DC for a "March on Washington" protest where they fought for
freedom, justice and equality, and expressed concerns over ... Show more content on
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In 1964 both of these family sitcoms were introduced to us. The Munsters and Addams Family
actually critiqued the suburban family as embodied in the television sitcoms of the 1950s by
undermining its image. These shows portrayed the typical suburban family that included young kids
and family pets, as well as a mother who held the family together. They also questioned the values
and social norms of American families during the 1950s. Just like their ethnic identity, social status
and extended family structure, the Munster and Addams families made us question traditional
family roles. The women of the house break gender rules of the 1960s housewife by looking for
employment outside the home, while the men, even though they work, they always seem to be home
all the time. The shows made parts of the counterculture safe for the television audience, assuring
them that being different could also be lovable. That's why young families really enjoyed watching
these shows because they realized that it was okay to be different and still be considered normal.
Both sitcoms also offered comfort that the deviance, the not so perfect nature of real families was
not really that strange at
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Summary Of The Shoemaker And The Tea Party
Book Analysis:
The Shoemaker and The Tea Party by Alfred E. Young
In the book The Shoemaker and The Tea Party, Alfred E. Young argued through the life of Robert
Twelves Hewes, a poor shoemaker who participated in thee of the most significant events during the
American, was over looked in his parts but the Founding Fathers gain all the recognition from the
work of the common people. Robert Hewes, was a young and poor shoemaker, who was rejected
from the military because his height but still found a way to make his life meaningful by
participating in the Boston Massacre of 1770, the Boston Tea Party of 1773 and became a
militiaman during the American Revolution. During the events which lead to the American
Revolution, the class systems seem ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Hewes knew four of the five men who were gun down by the British soldiers who felt threaten by
the colonist. One of the men gun down was James Caldwell who he caught as he fell to the ground.
By seeing this happen first hand, Hewes feels the rage against the British and their disregarded for
the colonist troubles. Thus, this pushed Hewes to choose sides which did not go over well with his
credits who were loyalist to the crown. As a result, to him choosing to be a radical he struggled to
get by as he was pushed to the poverty. So, one can surmise that this was like this for most of the
other public which only drove them to seek freedom from those who were oppressing
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The American Dream
During the era, the American dream was the notion that a man could create a successful life for
himself and his family. As discussed earlier, America effectively isolated women and African
Americans, therefore they had no way to make a living to support themselves. A prime example of
this would be the poem I Hear America Singing by Walt Whitman. Whitman describes the sound of
America as one of hard work produced by workers. He writes, "the carpenter singing his as he
measures his plank or beam " (Whitman 3). It illustrates the hard work that Americans put into their
careers, and their willingness to support the nation's economy. No African Americans appear in the
poem, and Whitman describes women working in the house. Once again, the ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Similar to the strict gender roles in careers, religion also created social norms that prohibited African
and Americans from participating in certain activities. Religion majorly influenced the American
social norms and promoted the idea of exclusion heavily and white men fully supported it. Since the
time of migrating, religion has constantly been at the heart of America's priorities. Not only did
religion guide the social norms of the nation, but it also provided American's with a sense of
comfort and something to believe in. However, religion mainly acted as a tool to help people make
moral decisions, for example in the short story, Young Goodman Brown. The short story follows a
young man who goes on a religious journey, during the expedition Brown found himself running
from devilish creatures and used God to guide him to safety away from the "wicked one"
(Hawthorne 1). Men and Women across the country used their religions to guide their moral
compasses and decide what they should tolerate in their nation. For instance, in this era, many
people used religion to justify the need for slavery, which gave birth to the idea exclusivity was
okay, and that the bible supports white supremacy. It also allowed many Americans to claim that
slavery was a part of God's plan. The recurrent lack of inclusion from American society once again
presents itself in American's religious tolerance. Protestantism
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Essay on The Role of Youth in Politics
Cavins 1
Throughout the history of America young people have always played a crucial role in politics. The
famous writer Srirangam Srinivas wrote, "Our country is not in the hands of lazy and corrupted old
politicians, this country is ours i.e. youth". Young people between the ages 18 to 25 are the future of
this country and its political system. The young people of America have a responsibility to be
involved with politics and with their civic duties. The youth in America must be involved in politics
to ensure that America stays a country of freedom, and to combat the corruption in politics, they
must also be involved with their civic duties in order to give back to their country and to leave a
legacy of political and civic participation ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
When the founding fathers drafted the Constitution their main focus was creating a nation where
everyone would be free from the restraints of a controlling government and treated equal. America
has always been a nation of freedom, and needs to remain that way. The youth in this country is
charged with the task of ensuring that America remains the "land of the free". Without involvement
in politics this is not possible. If youth are to maintain the American ideals of freedom and equality
it is imperative that they be involved in politics. Voting every four years for the president, who is
more of a figure head than anything else, is simply not enough. Young people need to take a more
active role in politics such as running for a political office, local or national. This is the only way
they will be able to put their beliefs into action and ensure that America upholds it's long standing
values of freedom and equality. The youth need to start taking action as soon as they are old enough.
However, young people need to be educated on politics and be firm in their beliefs before delving
into the world of politics. In recent years the youth have shown a trend of disengagement and apathy
toward political involvement. According to "The Good Citizen", a book written by Russell J.
Dalton, political analysts and politicians agree that the youth are losing interest in politics and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The American Dream Essay
their willingness to support the nation through their work. No African Americans are discussed in
the poem, and women are said to be working in the house. Once again, the exclusivity of the nation
only allows white males to have a chance of achieving the American Dream. At this time, a majority
of African Americans remained enslaved across the Nation, which prohibited them from being able
to build any sort of life for themselves. Therefore the American Dream is not even an option for
almost a quarter of the population. How could someone prohibited from leaving a plantation be able
to support themselves and live an acceptable life? For almost all African Americans the idea was
unthinkable until the later half of the 1860's when the government abolished slavery. When it comes
to women, however, one could say that they could live the American dream. Women in America
worked in the home cleaning, cooking or sewing which one could consider a job that makes a life
for oneself by providing for the family. Although women continued to stay in their homes or
neighborhoods never fully expanding or acquiring a job in the community, Whitman hints at this in
his line, "the delicious singing of the mother, or of the young wife at work, or of the girl sewing or
washing" (Whitman 9). The average woman in America spent a majority of their time in the house
and had no rights to do anything for herself. Consequently, she relied on her husband or family to
provide a stable life for herself.
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Stereotypes Of The American Dream

  • 1. Stereotypes Of The American Dream We often refer to the U.S as a country of immigrants. Because there are so many different people from all over the world, it is hard to identify what the typical American is like. When you think of the USA, some stereotypes will probably come to mind – they love hamburgers, listen to country music, each own their own guns and are probably fat. However, does this stereotype fit everybody? It is often said that America is a country built on freedom, which is quite ironic considering the way the Europeans stole the land from the Native Americans and the country is built upon the backs of black slaves. What many Americans have in common is that they believe in the American Dream. The American Dream is difficult to define, but the idea is finding ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They tend to vote for the Republican Party and identify themselves as Christian. To mention another region, El Norte has been influenced by the Hispanics and has taken some important Latino values; family loyalty and group solidarity. In New Netherland, the early belief in freedom of religion, speech and trade became a trademark and it still is today. The Native Americans are the indigenous people of America. They were the first people of America and are worth mentioning when discussing who the Americans are today. Native Americans have their own traditions and beliefs. Unfortunately, the white settlers have mistreated them and because of that, many have lost a part of their culture and those who do not live in reservations have had to adjust to the more common culture. In conclusion, it is hard to define the typical American. What most have in common are the core values – freedom. The Americans are often very patriotic and are big believers in the constitution as well as their government. Most of them believe in the American Dream although many young people doubt it. Like–minded people often end up living in the same places and that is why it is easier to identify each region's values that the whole country's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. The Hidden Gift Of Being An American Essay Being able to call yourself an American is a gift, that holds hidden meanings. To me, the definition of an American is someone who embraces both freedom and the responsibility that comes with it. America has promised the experience of freedom in race, religion, gender, and the right to express yourself. Americans know this reality did not occur overnight. Many courageous people fought and are still fighting for freedom. However, the hidden meaning of behind the reality of being an American can be demonstrated as greed and longing for wealth or power. This hidden truth is a mask many Americans may wear, because they are to ashamed to admit how the American Dream is changing into materials and ethics. The twenty first century is losing the prideful gift of being an American. Frederick Douglass was a man who fought for his freedom and faced all the responsibilities that came with it. He was heroic and lionhearted, who had no hidden qualities. Frederick Douglass called out white Christians for their approval of slavery on religious grounds. He believed, "Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He once said, "No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true." Hawthorne demonstrated the hidden truth of being an American may be represented as a mask many Americans may wear, because they are to ashamed to admit their failures. Such as, in the novel The Great Gatsby a man was to ashamed he was poor. His name was Gatsby, he hid behind a mask or hidden truth of wealth. He describes his mask as, "You see I usually find myself among strangers because I drift here and there trying to forget the sad things that happened to me." Gatsby became rich to try and conquered the American Dream of being happy. However, in the end he died alone full of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Mfdp Research Paper Despite the horrific violence, two influential projects had their start during Freedom Summer, the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, or MFDP, and Freedom Schools. The goal of the MFDP was to show the whites of Mississippi that if given the chance the African American voters would come to the polling places in droves to vote. The party was led by African American residents of the state who wanted the elective franchise, or the vote. In addition to registering voters to the party, the African American leaders held a Freedom Vote on the same day as the actual elections in the state to show that the state's African Americans wanted to be involved in the political process. The vote was a huge success with over 80,000 African Americans across the state registering and "voting" for representatives from the party. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... At the beginning of August, students from freedom schools gathered for a convention, and their "increased confidence and political awareness [was] manifest." At this conference, the students were asked to vote on resolutions that concerned them, such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964, slum clearance, and the elimination of the poll tax. Freedom Schools not only stayed open after Freedom Summer was over, they had a lasting impact on the students who went to them. Students who went to Freedom Schools often had a better understanding of the political system than their counterparts and learned curriculum that fit their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. The American Dream In I Hear America Singing By Walt Whitman During this era the American dream was the notion that a man could create a successful life for himself and his family. As discussed earlier, America effectively isolated women and African Americans, therefore they had no way to make a living to support themselves. A prime example of this would be in the poem I Hear America Singing by Walt Whitman. Whitman describes the sound of America as one of hard work produced by workers. He writes, "the carpenter singing his as he measures his plank or beam " (Whitman 3). It illustrates the hard work that Americans put into their careers, and their willingness to support the nation's economy. No African Americans appear in the poem, and Whitman describes women working in the house. Once again, the exclusivity of the nation only allows white males to have a chance of achieving a pleasant, stable life. At this time, a majority of African Americans remained enslaved across the Nation, which prohibited them from being able to build any sort of life for themselves. Therefore the American Dream is not even an option for almost a quarter of the population. How could someone prohibited from leaving a plantation be able to support themselves and live an acceptable life? For almost all African Americans the idea was unthinkable until the later half of the 1860's when the government abolished slavery. When it comes to women, however, one could say that living the American dream was possible. Women in America worked in the home cleaning, cooking ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Frederic Douglass Essay The United States of America is a country that was founded on the basic principles of freedom and liberty. This often leaves it with a reputation as a land full of hope, where anything is possible as long as one is willing to work hard for it. Unfortunately, this idea is not always true. Frederick Douglas, who was born a slave, did not have the privelege of this aforementioned freedom, liberty, and social mobility. Even though he was an exceptionally bright man, he was enslaved and persecuted because of his skin color. His life represents both the failure and success of the American dream, with the failure being the extremely more dominant, because of the color of his skin. 	The most fundemental of aspect of the American dream is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... (Quote where he says he felt freedom) Feeling this yearnig from freedom at such a young age shows that being free was a god given right or "Law of nature", as Jefferson so eloquently stated in the Declaration of Independence. With all of this is mind it is very clear Douglass being born in to slavery was a deifinite failure of the American Dream. 	In the Declaration of Independence one of the most famous portions goes as follows: "We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed to certain unailiable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness." This pursuit of happiness is a very important part of the American dream, for it is the result of all the rights that were layed out. By being alloted these rights a person is free to pursue happiness in their life, whatever happiness may be to them. 	It is very ironic that when Douglass finally got his first taste of freedom he had to be deceptive in sneaking away from his owner, just as the writers of the constution were deceptive in their defintion of "man". Once Douglass escaped from slavery he was surprised to find that the north also a very racist place. Not only did the majority of northern whites still feel that blacks were inferiour, New York was full of people looking to turn in fugitive slaves. Frederick also found that his abolitionist friends were not free from this prejudice. At gatherings ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. The Importance Of Freedom In Persepolis Evident in the abundant arguments regarding freedom and to the extent of which these freedoms are protected by legislation, Americans typically believe that their fellow citizens can be trusted with almost unlimited freedom. Americans exercise many privileges such as speaking freely and having access to news media (whether true or fictitious) that we assume are our basic human rights. We believe that the more freedom we have the better and that we can control ourselves rather than relying on external pressures on freedom However, these are not given to all people and were in fact punishable offenses for Marjane Satrapi in her childhood and young adulthood as a woman in Iran as revealed in Persepolis. While at first she despises the constraints on her freedoms put in place by the government and her family, after struggling on her own with virtually unlimited freedom she goes back to the more restrictive environment in Iran. Satrapi argues that while we should not allow extreme government control of freedom, so restraints made by parents and other family members is crucial in the development and bettering of a person's upbringing. With too strong of governement restriction of freedom, one has no outlet of self expression or individuality and with too much freedom Satrapi is unable to create a safe environment for herself and remains emotionally unstable and she therefore argues that an environment with some restrictions is best. Americans tend to advocate for absolute ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. The Women Of The World War II Freedom A bronze life like statue of a solider, standing up straight, with a proud grin on his face. Alongside of him, is a young boy holding the solider right hand with a look of admiration for his hero. There attire appears to be from the twentieth century. To be more specific, they seem to stepped right out of the World War II time period. The solider is wearing a U.S. Army M–1943 Uniform, which consist of a M1 helmet. He is wearing M–43 Field Jacket, with regular field trousers for pants, along with his trousers. He is wearing an M–1943 Combat Service Boots. He is also welding a M1 Garand rifle. He is wearing a combat belt, to the right of on the waist of the solider is a water pouch, and to the left is what it seems to be a two ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Almost every time I walk or drive near the courthouse, these two statues stand out to me the most. Being a history lover for myself, it makes me feel blessed that the freedoms we do have In America. When I look at the young boy's face there is an emotion this boy captures, it gives me the very same feeling I had when I was growing up. It was the feeling of having a hero in life, a role model you could even say and for me that was my parents. This young boy was looking up to the man as a hero or maybe even as father figure as well. As Christians we too have a comparison with how this young boy looks to the solider. We look up to our Heavenly Father as a hero, or even a Savior. 1 John 3:16 of The King James Version says "Here by perceive we the love of God, because he laid down his life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren." When we look at the death count of World War II there were over 400,000 American soldiers that died. And the soldiers did this for us, they laid down their lives for our freedom so that we may live. When I look at the two statues, it reminds of three things. One, to never take this freedom that we have in America for granted. Two, it reminds what the Sacrifices that had to be made for our freedom. Most importantly three, it gives me a reminder of what Jesus did on the cross so we could be spiritually free. We Americans take for granted our well known freedoms, forgetting that people in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Should Young Adults Be Forced To War? Do you think young adults should be forced to war? In years past, upon high school graduation, every American Male was selected randomly by birthdate to serve in the military. For many years now, however, America has had an all–volunteer military that has worked very well. Even so, today some Congressmen insist that the United States should adopt a policy of mandatory military service following high school graduation. There are many disadvantages to mandatory military service. Not all recently graduated teenagers are mature enough to be responsible for our country's wellbeing. According to school psychologist Michael Thompson, "making the commitment to serve that time in the military should be each individual's choice." If young adults do not choose to serve, they will be unmotivated and unreliable in the military, and their lack of focus will endanger their comrades. Thompson also states that "the United States has the most powerful military in the world because it is made up of volunteer–men and women who have a desire to be there." If people are put in the war and do not give it their all, the United States will be less powerful. In ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... American politician and physician Ron Paul said, "Freedom is defined by the ability of citizens to live without government interference." If this is a free country, people should be able to choose whether or not to serve in the military. The article "Forcing Your Belief on Others Is Not Religious Freedom" Asserts that "As Americans we are guaranteed the right of freedom, but that freedom is limited so that it does not infringe upon others." Forcing others to give up a part of their life to satisfy someone else is not freedom, and they should use their freedom however they choose. In addition, using one's personal freedoms should not infringe on others; therefore, the United States should not require mandatory military ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. A Summer That Shocked The Nation Dest 1 Chris Dest HIST 104A 1964: a Summer That Shocked the Nation The 1960's was a time like no other in American history. Racial tension between African Americans and white, middle class citizens had plagued the country. Animosity towards African Americans was aggressive throughout the south and did not show signs of letting up. Alongside rising racial tensions, fear of communism put many on edge, which gave Americans more of a reason to use blacks as a scapegoat to blame for occurring issues. At the time, white Americans in the south perceived African Americans as inferior, regardless of if they were technically "free". The strong contempt towards the black community lead to widespread oppression of African Americans ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Doing this gave the African American community more power and voice. Standing united allowed these activist groups to implement their individual goals and place them all under the same branch. One major goal included black voter registration lead by Bob Moses and Tom Gaither (44). They believed that blacks had been disenfranchised by the Jim crow laws and other laws hindering their voter registration abilities. Voter registration forms made it nearly impossible for uneducated black Americans to register, often using trick questions (41). A majority of blacks did not feel comfortable registering to vote due to the potential repercussions. They would often be persecuted and harassed by locals and often were blacklisted or outed in the local newspapers if attempted to register. The act of fear instilled in many blacks throughout the south prevented them from registering. Moses and Gaither along with SNCC volunteers, helped this issue by going to local communities throughout Mississippi, motivating locals and the community by building local leaders. SNCC activist Charles McLaurin even stated "By getting the people together they will see that they are not alone..." (49). Going into communities and motivating locals to register helped many blacks overcome their fears and aided the "snowball effect" of black voter registration. Creation of local leaders gave hope to many black southerners showing them that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Huckleberry Finn American Experience Essay The Flight to Freedom "Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves", left the mouth of the once prominent advocate for the abolishment of slavery, former president of the United States, and revolution pioneer, Abraham Lincoln, in his quest for the independence of slaves throughout the nation. Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn expresses the American experience and captures the same idea of acquiring freedom, both physical and mental escape, through the characters Huckleberry Finn and Jim, who both physically escape their dangerous and threatening living arrangements, and the raft that aides Huckleberry and Jim in their quest and exploration of themselves and a new life. The concept of the "American ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This coincides with the idea of an "American experience" for Huck as he is considered "hip" and daring for leaving town and his stagnant lifestyle in pursuit something greater, something new, something that young adults like him would not have considered during that time. As he escapes without direction Huck encounters Jim, a slave who has also fled his captivity in pursuit of liberation. Huck befriends the slave and the two venture down the Mississippi River, embarking on a journey in which they face violence, distress and episodes of lost hope. A large change that we the readers view during the time Huck and Jim spent together on the river, is Huck's perception of slavery. After conversing with and getting to know Jim, his values, beliefs and dreams, Huck begins to truly believe that slaves like Jim are not as society paints them to be, that they too are humans with feelings and deserve rights equal to a white man. It is through Huck's change of heart and development of character that Twain suggests a new way of thinking for future generations of Americans, as they experience more places, people and cultures. Twain also employs the character Jim to convey the "American experience", despite him falling short of many opportunities that free, white Americans were able to have during this time. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Young Americans For Freedom Analysis In contrast, the American liberal ideologues of the time seemed to be swinging more and more to the left even in the face of the now all–powerful Soviet Union from which Rand had previously escaped. While Eugene Debs ultimately never achieved a meaningful socialist coalition, the labor movements of the early 20th century had continuously scored major victories in establishing unions and increasingly stringent labor standards. By 1932, the Great Depression had destroyed much of the earned material wealth of millions of Americans and left those same Americans with little in the way of opportunity. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a cousin of former President Teddy Roosevelt and an ardent liberal, beat the beleaguered incumbent Herbert Hoover in the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Indeed, he was that conservative; however, it was not the time for a Goldwater conservative in America. Goldwater was seen as an unhinged maniac who would lead us into a nuclear apocalypse, as popularized by an infamous Johnson campaign commercial. Even Nixon (who was an actual unhinged maniac) and Ford (who wasn't) would fail to claim leadership even as conservative Republicans began winning more and more. It would be a former actor by the name of Ronald Reagan who would ultimately become the conservative Godsend that Buckley and his ilk so desired. In his famous speech in support of Goldwater, A Time for Choosing, Reagan said "You and I have the courage to say to our enemies, "There is a price we will not pay." "There is a point beyond which they must not advance." And this –– this is the meaning in the phrase of Barry Goldwater's "peace through strength." Winston Churchill said, "The destiny of man is not measured by material computations. When great forces are on the move in the world, we learn we're spirits –– not animals." And he said, "There's something going on in time and space, and beyond time and space, which, whether we like it or not, spells duty." Using his skills as an excellent orator, Reagan would immediately become one of the most lauded conservative voices in America – although Goldwater would lose the election Johnson in a landslide, Reagan would use his speech to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Flappers In The 1920's The 1920s was a period of revolution and liberation for women with the rise of "the new woman", who experienced changes in both appearance and attitude, and the reconsideration of the purpose of sex. The 1920s gave birth to the flapper, the type of woman who rejected the traditional prudish values of the Victorian Era. Merriam–Webster defines a flapper as "a young woman; specifically: a young woman of the period of World War I and the following decade who showed freedom from conventions (as in conduct)." Flappers started to emerge because of the shift in the role of women in society. Women held more political power because of the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment and more and more women were entering the labor force. Women had more ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Roaring Twenties was a time of change and innovation with the rise in new technology. Even though electricity was available to Americans before the 1920s only a small percentage of American household had electricity. By the height of the Roaring Twenties about two thirds of American households had electricity. With the rise of electricity came the popular household items such as the electric vacuum cleaner and the automatic washing machine. As the twenties proceeded the automobile because extremely popular. The young generation used the automobile to escape from the watchful eye of the older generations. Often, the automobile was used for scandalous meetings between lovers. Another innovation of the Roaring Twenties is film. Film became one of the main sources of entertainment for Americans during the 1920s. "By the mid–1920s movie theatres were selling 50 million tickets each week, a sum equal to roughly half the US population" (Zeitz). The movies theatre not only served as a source of entertainment, but the theaters also served as a classroom for the young generation. The young adults learned about love and sex is scandalous movies such as Flaming Youth. Movie theatres also served as a source of news and a place for propaganda and advertisements. Radio also experienced a vast expansion during the 1920s. Radio sparked a radical change the country's awareness. News such as election results could be broadcasted live across the nation so that citizens could be more aware of what was going on in the country. Radio also provided a source of entertainment by broadcasting sporting events like the World Series. Radio contributed to liberalism by broadcasting "'race music', 'hillbilly' sounds, and ethnic recordings" into ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Radicalism In The 1960's The 1960's were a decade of radicalism but it also had a conservative side. The students and the youth had a big role in the 1960's. They had a big influence in the society and political. "Young people played an important role in the movements for social change during the 1960s." (lessonsite.com) The students' actions in 1960's were a major changed in the social and fight racism and poverty, increase student rights. The students also belief in democracy or the idea that Americans should decide or have a word in the major economic, political, and social questions to form the country. They belief that working together and be democratic they can do anything and reach a change for the nation. The students' hoped and looked for a change. They ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... These documents help in the 1960's to have or get better living and it continue does because we can always go back to history and see how we can make it better. The authors of Port Huron Statement mention "democracy of individual Participation" (Give Me Liberty 2nd edition by Forner, Eric) (Page 999). They mean that we can create their own destiny. This idea shows today on how the economic works today. How an individual can buy or sell in the market at Wall Street. You just need one person to decide like that. Democracy is still today's big part of this nation. The statement also links in today's political ideas in how the tuition keep increasing for students and how back in the day they fight for a better living for the students. We still have some problems of money in colleges. The debt is a big issue in today's life for students. Regardless of the help that we received as students from the government, like the grants we still have a big issues about money and racism. Racism is also another big matter in today's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Freedom: Sharon and Port Hurom Statement Essay How did the young conservatives who wrote the Sharon Statement understand freedom? The Young Americans for Freedom was from a conservative point of view. It affirmed they considered to an affirmation of God's' will, affirming their beliefs in individual free will and liberty; the inextricable bond between economic freedom; the purpose of the government protecting freedom through preservation of internal order, national defense, and the administration of justice; the genius of the Constitution (especially the clause reserving power of the states); and the market economy as the single system compatible with freedom . . .Communism is named as the named as the greatest threat to democracy. (1) Despite the libertarians eventually being ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is not easy, and it is unpleasant, to adduce statistics evidencing the cultural superiority of White over Negro: but it is a fact that obtrudes, one that cannot be hidden by ever–so–busy egalitarians and anthropologists."(4) "National Review believes that the South's premises are correct... It is more important for the community, anywhere in the world, to affirm and live by civilized standards, than to bow to the demands of the numerical majority." "The South confronts one grave moral challenge. It must not exploit the fact of Negro backwardness to preserve the Negro as a servile class... Let the South never permit itself to do this. So long as it is merely asserting the right to impose superior mores for whatever period it takes to affect a genuine cultural equality between the races, and so long as it does so by humane and charitable means, the South is in step with civilization, as is the Congress that permits it to function." (5) What do the authors of the Port Huron Statement appear to mean by participatory democracy? The SDS wanted to participate in their own destinies, and to get away from what they saw as serve limitations in an undemocratic society. They wanted "simplicity in registration and voting, unfettered dominance of wealthy, property requirements, literacy tests and poll taxes." (6)) Individual people were no dependent solely on themselves, but as part of community, and being part of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. The Revolution Of The 1960 ' S The Young in the 1960's Many people believe the 1960s, were the golden age but, contrary, by the end of the decade, it seemed like the The United States was falling apart. That could be one of the reason why different groups were growing with new ideas, demands and of course many reforms. Student activists became more and more radical. They protested over colleges, massive antiwar demonstrations and occupied various public places to make their revolutionary ideas visible and to be heard. In 1960s, the new radicalism took place. New groups of students became to gather, such as the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) and Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) two years later. Both groups were viewed as the leading edge of a new radicalism. These group believed they had a new route to greater freedom. The students documented and summarized their beliefs and what some called the New Left. They believed the participatory democracy was the real social change. By the mid–1960s, facing growing opposition among the young to the war in Vietnam, they were viewed as a rebellion force. They became more militant and active in social issues and politics. Some demonstrations were violent and even people died. The young group became a strong force in The United Stated and, also other countries. Also, changed their physical appearance by growing their hair, used drugs and, practice "free love." In the beginning of the 1960's these small groups of student started to emerged and rapidly ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. The American Liberty And Freedom As time goes on our ways of life begin to change however, the ideas and past events still remain. Throughout history we have seen how American liberty and freedom is always centered on the dominant white male image. As time continues on those of minority decent have had work twice as hard to receive the same level of equality as all whites both male and female. Women and African Americans have struggled much more because back then white men believed that they couldn't be trusted and that they were not worthy of holding power. The inequality of American liberties and freedom has been displayed recently when a white male cop attacked a young African American student. She wasn't able to express her freedom because she had to adhere to the cop that was dominant towards her. Women had to work so hard to acquire their freedom and this was displayed through the Seneca Falls Convention. Elizabeth Cady Stanton wanted her voice to be heard and she spoke about how women deserved to be as free as men. She stated how government created "disgraceful laws as give man the power to chastise and imprison his wife, to take the wages which she earns, the property in which she inherits..." This clearly shows how back in the past women weren't equal to men and they really didn't have any liberties or really any freedom. The men were of power and basically anything they said was what was right. Going back to the case of the young African girl, her voice wasn't being heard. All throughout the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Persuasive Essay On The American Dream America is the land of the free, home of the brave. A saying integrated into songs, and used in many American's conversations throughout their lives. A phrase that shaped one of the main ideas in the "American Dream." America is the land of opportunity, prosperity, and freedom with honest hard work. But, how many Americans are free when they are forced to exploit themselves just to make it through each day without starving? Every day, thousands of helpless Americans find themselves chained to a lifestyle that strips them of their human and American rights. However, the ones depriving these people of their chance at living out the American Dream are not the people getting reprimanded. It is the victims of human trafficking that are often ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Unfortunately, that only ended the slavery of African Americans, not the sex trafficking industry that has trapped too many Americans. The victims of sex trafficking lose the opportunities the American Dream has to offer the minute they are exploited and sold. They are unable to start a business, buy land, go to college, start a family, or even have a friend. The opportunity of a real relationship is unattainable because the only people they know want their body and nothing more. The opportunity of a potential job is even stripped from Americans, with the example of the latest news in Hollywood. Women struggle to get a role unless they use their body, throwing all rights and respect out the window. Men such as Harvey Weinstein, Kevin Spacey, and Matt Zimmerman all lost their jobs and America's respect for sexually assaulting and raping women. Instead of women working diligently and earning their spot in a movie, men like the ones listed before demand sexual favors of actresses in order to be cast in a movie. The American Dream's fundamental idea is that anyone can achieve their goals through hard work. There is always an opportunity for success through hard work, but for these actresses and victims of sex trafficking there is no opportunity. They are forced to use their bodies in order to obtain anything in their lives. This violates more than just the American Dream, it defiles the Constitution and what the American government was built upon. The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Who Is Abigail Adams Struggle For Equality In Colonial... Consumed with the desire to gain liberty and equality, Americans fought for changes in their society resulting in the American War for Independence. Unfortunately the fight for independence did not bring liberty and equality to all Americans. Native Americans, African slaves, and women continued under the control of those with more money and power, which mainly included white, property owning men. As time went on the young American Republic continued to fight for ideals independence eventually making a revolutionary change in the way American's live. Soon after the American War for Independence, the Declaration of Independence was written and amendments to the Constitution were made in order bring America into a new season of change in government. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Most countries during the Colonial Era were ruled by a monarchy claiming only one religion to be true and enforcing that religion on the people under their rule. Some of the first settlers came from Britain, where Catholicism was forced upon each citizen, whether it was what they believed or not. Religious freedom was a rare liberty the settlers longed for, causing them to leave their home country to come to the new world in hopes of gaining the freedom they desired. Yet, even though the Europeans resented having a ruler tell them what religions were "wrong" and what religion they had to be believe, various groups of settlers still came to America and told the Indians their religion was wrong and forcefully attempted to convert the Indians to their own beliefs. It was many years after they arrived that the settlers finally established an official law giving religious freedom to all ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Analysis: Is The American Dream Still Possible? America. Land of opportunity and freedom. Home of the American dream. But, is it all still real? Is the American dream still possible or is it just that? A dream? The American dream is the hope for all Americans and immigrants. It's the ideal that you can 'make it big' in America. That if you try hard enough, you can achieve anything. America still provides access to the American dream and we are still able to achieve it due to the opportunities that America offers and the undying American spirit in every American out there. Throughout history, Americans have always had traits that were common to the typical 'American dream success stories'. In the article "is the American dream still possible?", the author writes, " self–reliance and sacrifice. Most of those interviewed display qualities common to American success stories: determination, flexibility, pragmatism, willingness to work hard and especially self–reliance." The author explains how the majority of Americans have the traits to achieve the American dream, but are ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... William Zinsser says in his story, " the right to fail","Failure isn't fatal. Countless people have had a bout with it and come out stronger as a result. Many have even come out famous."Zinsser explains that throughout American history, the people who succeed are typically the ones that also failed. And those opportunities are given to us as freedoms. The American dream is still possible through the freedoms provided. The author, Joseph Bruchac, states in his poem "Ellis island" that, " Beyond the red brink of ellis island where the two slovak children who became my grandparents waited the long days of quarantine...". In the poem, the author explains how many people, including his own grandparents, waited for long times in even longer lines to have access to the freedoms of America. But not every part of America has supported the American ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Fear And The Forced Evacuation Fear and the Forced Evacuation of the Japanese–Americans How do explain something that is completely in the wrong as ok? Why can people, organizations and even governments make irrational decision over and over again? The United States prides itself on it's ability to be a free country and support freedom of religion and freedom of speech but throughout history their are numerous accounts of the United States going against it's own beliefs and treating it's people in terrible ways. One example of the United States going against it's pride in equality and rhetoric of democracy and acting in ways of exclusion and inequality is during World War II when the United States forced evacuation of the Japanese to internment camps. The memoir, "Looking ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When they pulled the nearly 120,000 Japanese–Americans the government was acting on fear. The government was not only scared of a future attack but also the government feared the difference in cultures. The Japanese lifestyle was significantly different than they popular American lifestyle. The Japanese did speak a different language and did believe in a different religion. They ate different foods and played different games. Many did strive to enjoy the ways of American culture as well, "I grew up playing hopscotch and jacks, learning kendo and ikebana. I studied U.S. history at school and Japanese on Saturday. For breakfast I ate scrambled eggs and mochi. Dinner could include fried chicken and sushi," (11). The Japanese strived to be both but the government devastatingly didn't understand. The government feared the different culture and beliefs and their possibilities they had for the country. "Most Japanese were highly productive, successful people in whatever work they pursued. As a result they became the brunt of some non–Japanese people's fears, envy and prejudice. The war provided the excuse for removing the Japanese from the West Coast and to eliminate competition and literally take over whatever gains the Japanese had made," (92). Placing the Japanese–Americans into interment camps proved the governments fear of the Japanese culture even though the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Social Movement Change Kesha Jones Social Movements as Agents of Change The United States has transitioned since Reconstruction to a more diverse nation. Women defeated the overwhelming behavior on what society thinks. African Americans experienced obstacles to finally gain freedom. The different minority groups movements helped races, for example the Native Americans and Hispanics stand up for their rights. Social movements helped form the United States to a more equivalent country. The feminist movement wanted to end discrimination and gain equal rights for women. Until 1964, women could not work, dance, drink, smoke, use birth control or vote. When the Nineteenth Amendment passed in the Roaring 20s, women had the privilege to vote. During the 1950s most women stayed home to take care of the children and made great wives to their husbands. Shortly through the years and struggles for women, Betty Friedan started a group called National Organization for Women. The organization helped end job discrimination and legalize abortion. (NOW) also went to Congress and the Supreme Court for pro–equality laws. Overall the women remained tired of the way society thinks women should act, however the organizations helped them get to where they are today. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Not only did women and African Americans battle for their rights, Hispanics and Native Americans had enough as well. The American Indian Movement advanced red power and the Indians went to federal courts armed with copies of their treaties demanding their freedom. Cezar Chavez, the founder of United Farm Workers, dedicated his life to help farm workers with the poor working conditions for the Hispanics. With these diverse developments Hispanics and Native Americans gained freedom and rights along with others in the Civil Rights period in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Slavery Is The Fourth Of July Analysis Freedom, this essential term present in the vocabulary of all Americans, is one of the most distinctive founding ideas that shaped the national identity. This idea of freedom undoubtedly defines America's past and present identity. Whether it's the fight for freedom from the British's oppression, the fight for freedom of African Americans from the institution of slavery or the unalienable rights of freedom of speech and petition, freedom is deeply embedded in the fabric that makes up America. This term, freedom, never had a fixed meaning or definition. Instead, it has been the subject of conflict, disagreement and struggle throughout American History. There has been a constant debate over the meaning of freedom and it has given rise to different meanings constructed on almost all levels of society. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He argues that the institution of slavery is needed for the freedom of the white working class. Freedom is not only a constant battle between slavery and workers but also a constant topic of minorities and even women. Although freedom was not the direct message being expressed in "A Second Peep at Factory Life", the author in this Mills Document would argue for freedom in a more women's right perspective. The actual definition and meaning of freedom has been challenged through American History and has deepened its importance for the United States over ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Freedom Of Speech Rights In The United States America is a nation that takes pride in its ability to protect the fundamental rights of their citizens such as those mentioned in the 1st amendment. Unfortunately, that was not always the case. During the Lochner era, the right to a freedom of contract was considered a fundamental right. While rights such as freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and voting, were considered non–fundamental. It wasn't until the New Deal era that the court changed the standard to be that rights such as freedom of religion, speech, and voting, were fundamental rights. It is the New Deal standard that is the foundation for our freedom of speech right today in America (GGW, 2017). In other places, the standards are not the same, such as Germany. Both countries grant the right of freedom of speech, but speech is regulated and justified differently. In this paper, the focus will be on how the ruling and justification in the German case "Auschwitz lie" differs and compares to American constitutional law regarding freedom of speech. In "Auschwitz lie," a case was brought in front of the court regarding the freedom of speech right under Basic Law, which is the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Germany. The National Democratic Party of Germany (NDP) was hosting an event, and had decided to invite the historian David Irving. The NDP could host the event, but was obligated to adhere to specific conditions. The specific condition was that there could not be any statement regarding the persecution ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Counterculture In 1960s In the 1960s a new group of young, long haired and wild people began to form in San Francisco, California and soon spread throughout the rest of the country and then developed around the world. Its origins may be traced to European social movement in the 19th and early 20th century such as Bohemians, and the influence of Eastern religion and spirituality. From around 1967, its fundamental ethos including harmony with nature, communal living, artistic experimentation particularly in music, and the widespread use of recreational drugs spread around the world during the counterculture of the 1960s, which has become closely associated with the subculture. These people were given the name known as "hippies" they were defined as "a usually young ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In October, 1967 over fifty thousand hippies gathered in Washington D.C. to make a statement against the war by trying to levitated the Pentagon building, headquarters of the U.S. Department of Defense. Music was a big key to hippies a concert named Woodstock Festival began in a rural town of Bethel, New York from August 15 to August 18, 1969 a man named Michael Lang is a musical concert promoter, producer and artist manager who is best known as the cocreator of the Woodstock music and art festival in 1969 he promoted Jimi Hendrix known as " American rock singer and songwriter" he was the headline of the Woodstock Festival in 1969 and highest paid performer. Another is Janis Lyn Joplin she an "American rock singer and songwriter" one of the most successful and widely known female rock star of her era. The ground area was the max of the 600– acre dairy farm. Woodstock Festival was a three day of pop and rock concert that turned out to be the most popular music event in history it becomes a symbol of the hippie movement of the 1960s. At first, many things went wrong people didn't want any hippies and drug addicts coming to the original location. About two months before the concert new site had to be found but lucky organizers found a 600–acre farm which was perfect also the organizers expected about 50,000 people but as the date came nearer it became clear that far more people wanted to be at the event. A few days before the festival began hundreds of thousands of pop and rock fans were on their way to Woodstock. There were not enough gates and tickets were checked also the fans made holes in the fences so lots of people just walked in. About 300,000 to 500,000 people were at the concert. Having 500,000 people at Woodstock festival only 2 people die. One person died of a drug overdose and the other die in a sleeping bag ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. Female Sexuality And The Paradox Of Sexual Freedom By... Freedom, opportunities, and information are some features of this modern society. Clearly, humans are now having a very different life compared to the past. Along with this well–developed world, people get more chances to express how they think, do what they want, and love who they love. Especially young people, they become more independent and are capable of living their own lives. However, while society provides people a lot of benefits, it actually makes their lives even more complex at the same time by leaving them pressures and confusions of who they really are. In her essay, "Selections from Hard to Get:Twenty–Something Women and the Paradox of Sexual Freedom," Leslie Bell mentions that while in this new–in between developmental period American twenty–something women have more freedom and opportunities about their sexual lives than previous generations, they are struggling with the paradoxes of their relationships and desires. Bell suggests that social expectations and culture guidelines, which are conventions of female sexuality and stereotypes of being a good girl, prevent these young women from pursuing their sexual desires and limiting their relationships with men. However, even these women have chosen the way they live and what kind of sexual life they want in order to be bad girls to break those old rules, they ended with losing their identities. In general, female sexuality is impacted more by establishing a women's identity rather than clinging on ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Essay On The Most Challenged Groups In The 1920s Most Challenged Groups in the 1920s During the nineteen twenties, most Americans experienced a higher increase in economic status. There was high growth in many industries leading to the availability of new jobs. With the increase in jobs, salaries for most citizens increased, and many more people are employed. As the rate of employment increased, the lives of many citizens improved and they could easily cater for the basic needs. The growth of economy gave room for changes in the social life of a good percentage of Americans. After World War, young soldiers also returned with new culture making them adopt new traditions. Higher education level and the freedom given to women to occupy jobs in industries also led to challenges in obeying traditional activities. All these changes and freedom made the youths challenge the traditional social patterns through the following ways ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Many youths, both men, and women started to challenge the traditional social patterns. Young women no longer saw anything good with longer dresses that hid their body shape, decided to style up, and began to wear new–fashioned dresses that exposed some parts of their bodies. Many young women started drinking alcohol with adults in public and smoking cigarettes for the first time. Instead of participating and listening to the normal traditional music, young people changed their perception of music and started listening to jazz. They abandoned their traditional dances that were embraced by their parents and grandparents and adopted modern type of dancing, which involved too much holder. The film industry also improved, though it was incorporated immorality such as sex films, production of sex tapes, and books that lead to homosexuality and early engagement in sex, which was not allowed traditionally. Hence, young citizens mostly challenged traditional social patterns in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Right Makes Left. On September 11Th, 1960, The Founding Right Makes Left On September 11th, 1960, the founding members of the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) published their basic ideologies of in their "Sharon Statement." Two years later on the June of 1962, members of the Students for a Democratic Society at their retreat published their political manifesto in a paper known as the Port Huron Statement. Despite their differing political views, both political youth groups centered their criticism on the same target: the American government. An analysis of both documents revealed that both believed that positive change could only come by the youth, because only they saw the real flaws of the current system and have the ability to make a difference. A brief background of both the YAF and the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Both were formed by university students during a time of young political activism. There was also a generational understanding of 1960. This recognition was clearly understood by the writers of the Port Huron Statement when they wrote, "Our work is guided by the sense that we might be the last generation in the experiment with living. But we are minority." Hence for the SDS members, they not only felt they were the age group that knew best the turbulent times, but they were also the only ones who fathomed the issues behind the chaos. Likewise, the writers behind the Sharon Statement stated that "In this time of moral and political crisis, it is the responsibility of the youth of America to affirm certain eternal truths." It was up to the young conservatives to point out the issues of contemporary America and call for a return to the universal principles that the country was supposedly founded upon. Both manifestos recognized a crisis happening in the US and sought to rectify their truths politically, economically and socially. Moreover, the YAF and SDS both argued from a similar point of view: that the government and its policies were the main instigators for the political, social and economic issues during the early 1960s. The YAF saw the government as "acting beyond [their] rightful functions" and thus has reduced the American concept of liberty and freedom. Yet the Sharon Statement associated these political intrusions to the government's role in the state economy. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Student Non Violent Coordinating Committee Young people throughout history have been drawn to social movements. These social movements often included marches and non–violent protesting, but not all of them included violence at the hands of police or nights where sleep is impossible because of fear. The young people involved in Freedom Summer in 1964 would change the course of history, but not without significant sacrifices. Freedom Summer or the Mississippi Summer Project was the brainchild of the Student Non–Violent Coordinating Committee or SNCC. The project had four main goals, to expand African American voter registration, to organize a legally constituted "Freedom Democratic Party" that will challenge the whites–only Mississippi Democratic Party, to establish "freedom schools" and to open community centers where legal and medical assistance were available. In order to achieve these goals SNCC specifically recruited 800 white students under the age of 21. "Most of the volunteers were white students who had participated in civil rights activities in the North...The fact that the volunteers were expected to forgo summer jobs, to pay for their own transportation, and to provide their own bond money in the event of arrest ensured that affluent students predominated." These students joined the already solid African American activist core in the South. The African American staff members who worked with the white volunteers often felt ambivalent about the need for white people to be hurt during the movement to get ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. 1960's Sexual Revolution The sexual revolution of the 1960's was a time of great importance to modern America. The changes that occurred across America changed our country as a whole, its influence spread from LA to New York to the 'Heartland of America', Lawrence Kansas. This revolution occurred at a critical point in world history as well. A new type of society formed with soldiers returning from WWII and people began to incorporate themselves with those who matched their identity and not just those geographically near them. People were frustrated and they wanted their voice to be heard, and now they had a group of citizens who would back them up and help them in their revolution. American ideals changed drastically in the twenty years that followed World War two ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... All young men and women became unified following world war II. At the time, many residents became more connected publicly and tuned in to the world around them, supporting evidence being that "nine out of ten of Lawrence's residents had a radio."(13), the public became much more unified through the war and all young men and women realized that they disagreed with their parents values, from the war, to politics, and especially to sex. These same young men and women were empowered by each other to make a change to society. They knew that they were the future of America and that the values of their parents were of little importance to them. They saw the hate and bloodshed and evil against those they valued equal and that sparked the revolt. A young man states in the Oread daily, "you became defensive of your absolutes. We became defensive of our idealism... And we became ANGRY!" America was indeed in the midst of a revolution, a stark cultural disagreement between old and young. This uprising from the young against the ideals, the values, the cultural laws put in place in America for centuries, truly made it a sexual ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Younger Generation Movement From 1946–1964 there was a sudden growth in population known as the baby boomers. There was a rise of the younger generation that skyrocketed and made a large population of the United States. "Tom Hayden and Students For a Democratic Society" from The Movements of The New Left: A Brief History With Documents and "Young Americans For Freedom" from The Rise of Conservatism in America have many similarities and differences. Both articles aim to get the voices from the younger generation (at the time) to stand up for their rights and beliefs. They were going to be the change in the generation to come. They were in it together, but from the two articles the perspectives were different. Both groups were looking for their voices to be heard and influential ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This was written in 1962, two years after The Sharon Statement was written. The Port Huron Statement was a rallying cry from The Students for The Democratic Society. Directly from The Port Huron Statement of August 1962 it is written, "We are the people of this generation bred in at least modest comfort, housed now in universities, looking uncomfortable to the world we inherit." To simplify, "We" means the students from the Democratic society. These students (younger generation) are the future of the world. They are what will be the world in the future. They articulated the fundamental problems of the American Society and laid out a radical vision for a better future. "...that decision–making of basic social consequence be carried on by public groupings; that politics be seen positively...." The students from the democratic society believed in strength of the government. They believed that the younger generation had a huge influence, but in a social setting. All individuals had power but to make worth of it, the government had to be the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Ballad Of Birmingham By Dudley Randall In the 1960s racial discrimination, segregation, and race–inspired violence was at its worst. Jim Crow laws kept white and African American people separate in public, the Ku Klux, Klan forced African Americans to fear for their lives every minute of every day, and absolutely nothing was happening to change these injustices. African Americans participated in thousands of nonviolent boycotts, freedom marches, and protests and nothing was ever changed until the morning of September 15, 1963. On that morning, a bomb, made of dynamite, forever changed the lives of the citizens attending the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. Four young black girls died in the bombing, inspiring poet Dudley Randall to write his powerful poem, "Ballad of Birmingham." Through his poetry, Randall influenced change in the Civil Rights movement, and by owning the largest printing press of the 1960s, played a huge role in the Black Arts Movement. Dudley Randall's ballad, "Ballad of Birmingham," expresses his feelings of helplessness and sorrow after the tragic and senseless 16th Street Baptist Church bombing using irony, imagery, and tone to allow his readers to understand what life was like for African Americans in America in the 1960s. Irony in "Ballad of Birmingham" is found throughout the poem starting in the very beginning of the poem because one would expect the mother to be the one to want to go to the freedom march, not a young girl. Also irony is present in the poem when the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Explain What Political Economic And Social Freedoms Did... In 1850 The Northern free blacks started to become more free.There was a slave population in the U.S which was 476,000. Slaves are becoming more free in voting and political freedom. What political, economic, and social freedoms did free blacks have in the North? In The North the free northern blacks had some political, economic, and social freedoms. By the 1830's Free northern blacks had a few political freedoms. . This is because the states population voted for this reasons for blacks to vote and also male jury duty. The only state that voted for black males to vote and do male jury duty was Massachusetts. There was 5 states that had voting restricted and 6 other states voted no for black male voting. The proves why we should all just ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Why We Cant Wait Rhetorical Questions In 1861 America had a civil war in order to free African Americans from slavery. Thirty five years later, the Supreme Court case Plessy vs. Furgeson ruled "separate but equal." However, in the 1960's, the races were separate but far from equal. In Martin Luther King Jr.'s book "Why We Cant Wait" he uses rhetorical questions, pathos, and diction of the word freedom in order to persuade people to make a change in the way African Americans were being treated. First, king uses rhetorical questions in order to get people to think about the way Africans Americans were being treated. He uses the example of two young children asking, "Why does misery constantly haunt the Negro?" How bad do things need to be for this question to cross a young child's mind? This question is asked by children in order to make people think of how badly Africans are being treated, and persuade them to make a change. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He tells the story of a young African girl in order to make the audience feel sympathy. He writes, "She can no longer attend the all–Negro school in her neighborhood because her mother died only recently after a car crash. Neighbors say if the ambulance hadn't come so late to take her to the all Negro hospital the mother might still be alive." This story is told so the audience will understand the blatant disregard for African American lives. It is told to make people realize that a change needs to be made and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. Definition Essay Freedom Freedom is often viewed by having the right to be independent or to be "free from servitude, constraint, inhibition, and liberty" (Oxford Dictionary). The word freedom derived from a "Germanic" culture. Freedom has a different meaning to different people; for example kids, adults and different races. Socially, politically, and religiously the word freedom fits into different categories with different meanings depending on who thinks about the word. Freedom has a wide range of definitions that should be specifically stated in one that addresses the public in one way so everyone knows the same definition and does not cause confusion. Socially, the word freedom from a kid's point of view can mean that they have the right or "independence" ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When it comes to politics, people become very serious. Kids do not have much of a say in politics when they are younger than 18, but once they turn 18, they can vote to elect someone to run office. The problem with this is most young teens today do not know what is actually being said in office. Teens think it would be "funny" or "cool" to vote for someone when the whole world could crash. The word freedom effects teens in this way because they think "oh, I have the right to be free and have free speech" which is true but that statement can not be taken lightly. Most young teens do not have a clue about politics and vote anyways causing the voting pole to increase towards one person running in office and it could be where that person is not favorited by the older generation. Adults on the other hand are from an older generation who has deeper knowledge of politics. The word freedom for adults politically could mean that they can vote for who they want to because they are "free" to do so. Having two generations of people and different races politically can cause problems with the freedom to vote. Also, African Americans have a different view on freedom politically. African Americans can have very much the same view of an adult as well as having their own independent view. In this case politically the word freedom means anyone can have the right to vote and have free speech. Religious beliefs can often affect the word freedom as ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. White Suburbia In The 1960's The social and cultural movements of the 1960s began to upset the traditional "norms" of gender constructs, family and social structures, racial biases, and portrayals of white suburbia that existed in the 1950s. Many social movements were taking place in the US while the Vietnam war going on. In early 1960 black college students in Greensboro, North Carolina sat in on a "white's only" lunch counter, as similar sit–ins began to happen in other southern cities too. One year later the Freedom Rides that supported integration in transportation, started taking place on buses. In late 1963, men and women gathered in Washington DC for a "March on Washington" protest where they fought for freedom, justice and equality, and expressed concerns over ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In 1964 both of these family sitcoms were introduced to us. The Munsters and Addams Family actually critiqued the suburban family as embodied in the television sitcoms of the 1950s by undermining its image. These shows portrayed the typical suburban family that included young kids and family pets, as well as a mother who held the family together. They also questioned the values and social norms of American families during the 1950s. Just like their ethnic identity, social status and extended family structure, the Munster and Addams families made us question traditional family roles. The women of the house break gender rules of the 1960s housewife by looking for employment outside the home, while the men, even though they work, they always seem to be home all the time. The shows made parts of the counterculture safe for the television audience, assuring them that being different could also be lovable. That's why young families really enjoyed watching these shows because they realized that it was okay to be different and still be considered normal. Both sitcoms also offered comfort that the deviance, the not so perfect nature of real families was not really that strange at ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Summary Of The Shoemaker And The Tea Party Book Analysis: The Shoemaker and The Tea Party by Alfred E. Young In the book The Shoemaker and The Tea Party, Alfred E. Young argued through the life of Robert Twelves Hewes, a poor shoemaker who participated in thee of the most significant events during the American, was over looked in his parts but the Founding Fathers gain all the recognition from the work of the common people. Robert Hewes, was a young and poor shoemaker, who was rejected from the military because his height but still found a way to make his life meaningful by participating in the Boston Massacre of 1770, the Boston Tea Party of 1773 and became a militiaman during the American Revolution. During the events which lead to the American Revolution, the class systems seem ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Hewes knew four of the five men who were gun down by the British soldiers who felt threaten by the colonist. One of the men gun down was James Caldwell who he caught as he fell to the ground. By seeing this happen first hand, Hewes feels the rage against the British and their disregarded for the colonist troubles. Thus, this pushed Hewes to choose sides which did not go over well with his credits who were loyalist to the crown. As a result, to him choosing to be a radical he struggled to get by as he was pushed to the poverty. So, one can surmise that this was like this for most of the other public which only drove them to seek freedom from those who were oppressing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. The American Dream During the era, the American dream was the notion that a man could create a successful life for himself and his family. As discussed earlier, America effectively isolated women and African Americans, therefore they had no way to make a living to support themselves. A prime example of this would be the poem I Hear America Singing by Walt Whitman. Whitman describes the sound of America as one of hard work produced by workers. He writes, "the carpenter singing his as he measures his plank or beam " (Whitman 3). It illustrates the hard work that Americans put into their careers, and their willingness to support the nation's economy. No African Americans appear in the poem, and Whitman describes women working in the house. Once again, the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Similar to the strict gender roles in careers, religion also created social norms that prohibited African and Americans from participating in certain activities. Religion majorly influenced the American social norms and promoted the idea of exclusion heavily and white men fully supported it. Since the time of migrating, religion has constantly been at the heart of America's priorities. Not only did religion guide the social norms of the nation, but it also provided American's with a sense of comfort and something to believe in. However, religion mainly acted as a tool to help people make moral decisions, for example in the short story, Young Goodman Brown. The short story follows a young man who goes on a religious journey, during the expedition Brown found himself running from devilish creatures and used God to guide him to safety away from the "wicked one" (Hawthorne 1). Men and Women across the country used their religions to guide their moral compasses and decide what they should tolerate in their nation. For instance, in this era, many people used religion to justify the need for slavery, which gave birth to the idea exclusivity was okay, and that the bible supports white supremacy. It also allowed many Americans to claim that slavery was a part of God's plan. The recurrent lack of inclusion from American society once again presents itself in American's religious tolerance. Protestantism ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Essay on The Role of Youth in Politics Cavins 1 Throughout the history of America young people have always played a crucial role in politics. The famous writer Srirangam Srinivas wrote, "Our country is not in the hands of lazy and corrupted old politicians, this country is ours i.e. youth". Young people between the ages 18 to 25 are the future of this country and its political system. The young people of America have a responsibility to be involved with politics and with their civic duties. The youth in America must be involved in politics to ensure that America stays a country of freedom, and to combat the corruption in politics, they must also be involved with their civic duties in order to give back to their country and to leave a legacy of political and civic participation ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When the founding fathers drafted the Constitution their main focus was creating a nation where everyone would be free from the restraints of a controlling government and treated equal. America has always been a nation of freedom, and needs to remain that way. The youth in this country is charged with the task of ensuring that America remains the "land of the free". Without involvement in politics this is not possible. If youth are to maintain the American ideals of freedom and equality it is imperative that they be involved in politics. Voting every four years for the president, who is more of a figure head than anything else, is simply not enough. Young people need to take a more active role in politics such as running for a political office, local or national. This is the only way they will be able to put their beliefs into action and ensure that America upholds it's long standing values of freedom and equality. The youth need to start taking action as soon as they are old enough. However, young people need to be educated on politics and be firm in their beliefs before delving into the world of politics. In recent years the youth have shown a trend of disengagement and apathy toward political involvement. According to "The Good Citizen", a book written by Russell J. Dalton, political analysts and politicians agree that the youth are losing interest in politics and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. The American Dream Essay their willingness to support the nation through their work. No African Americans are discussed in the poem, and women are said to be working in the house. Once again, the exclusivity of the nation only allows white males to have a chance of achieving the American Dream. At this time, a majority of African Americans remained enslaved across the Nation, which prohibited them from being able to build any sort of life for themselves. Therefore the American Dream is not even an option for almost a quarter of the population. How could someone prohibited from leaving a plantation be able to support themselves and live an acceptable life? For almost all African Americans the idea was unthinkable until the later half of the 1860's when the government abolished slavery. When it comes to women, however, one could say that they could live the American dream. Women in America worked in the home cleaning, cooking or sewing which one could consider a job that makes a life for oneself by providing for the family. Although women continued to stay in their homes or neighborhoods never fully expanding or acquiring a job in the community, Whitman hints at this in his line, "the delicious singing of the mother, or of the young wife at work, or of the girl sewing or washing" (Whitman 9). The average woman in America spent a majority of their time in the house and had no rights to do anything for herself. Consequently, she relied on her husband or family to provide a stable life for herself. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...