Tuesday, April 25, 2017
Transformation in Literature
What is a transformational book? To me, a transformational book changes the way you look at things. One of the most transformational book I've ever read is Challenger Deep. It helped me imagine the experience of someone with a mental illness. The main character, Cayden, seemed like a teenage boy not to different than most. As the book went on I experienced his descent into schizophrenia right alongside him. This book completely changed my perspective on what it's like to live with mental illness and have everyone call you "crazy" and a "burden to your family" for something that you can't control. This book is transformational and I think anyone who may be discriminatory towards the mentally ill should read it.
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
The New Deal
Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal changed many lives when it was put in place over his term as president, and some of the programs put in place still change lives today. The Federal Emergency Relief Act proposed by President FDR is similar to the more permanent Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, that is in place today. This provides funds for individual states to help those in need in the case of emergency.
The Civilian Conservation Corps, or CCC, is an environmental program instituted in 1933. It paid young unmarried men to help in the environment in ways such as fighting fires and draining swamps. This was the first step towards the many environmental programs that exist today such as the Environmental Protection Agency, or EPA.
Other programs such as welfare are still crucial to our government and country today. Someone from FDR’s administration said “People don't eat in the long run. They have to eat every day.” I believe this is extremely important, especially when people today are trying to defund welfare programs because they “promote laziness”. I think welfare programs sustain people and help get them back on their feet so they can get jobs and do better in the long run.
One more program that is still in place today is the Social Security Act. Social Security helps people by giving them small amounts of money over time so they are able to retire when the time is right. This is especially important so that people who are getting older do not have to work as hard as they always did to sustain themselves, especially if they can’t. Social Security also provides some funds to states to help people who are unemployed.
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Nature vs. Nurture: Our Moral Compass
Nature or nurture? This question is the basis of a debate about whether you or born who you are or if you are made that way. I believe you develop your morals and ethics with a combination of both. If you want to learn an instrument, start early. This is a common suggestion with varying degrees of scientific evidence behind it. When you’re younger your brain is still developing, so it is the most opportune time to start learning an instrument. Why not apply the same logic to morals?
Children aren't born with prejudices. They find their beliefs through the people and environment around them. Some people grow up to be racist and some people grow up to be activists and win Nobel Prizes. I believe it’s extremely important for a child to learn to accept people from an early age. My family’s neighbors and close friends when I was younger were a lesbian married couple. I went to their wedding and didn’t question it for a second. To me, they weren’t a groundbreaking progressive couple and they weren’t two sinners destined for hell. They were just Patty and Jen who lived in the condo next to us with their boisterous dog Girshwin. They moved away and we moved away, but I never forgot them. I got older and I learned about LGBTQ rights and understood more about some of the struggles they may have gone through. Being friends with them at such a young age was crucial to the way I think about acceptance and how I treat people. Another way I was taught these values was through what I read and watched.
As a young child, I was immersed in the storytelling of books and movies. I loved every word of the worn out pages in the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series that was once my brother’s, and I devoured every Harry Potter book as soon as I could Harry Potter is hugely influential to my generation, as the books came out in the 90s and the movies came out in the 2000s. The books deal with themes like discrimination, being an outcast, and finding where you belong. Harry’s Muggle family, the Dursleys, hated the magical side of him and worked to suppress it. He was neglected growing up and punished for expressing who he truly is. This is experience, minus the magic, is very real for many people. I also watched films like Happy Feet, which had strong environmental messages but were centered around progress and leaving behind old ideas and traditions that hold us back. These stories all made me who I am today.
Your childhood is vital to the way you think and make decisions, both logical and moral. I am who I am because of all the stories I've heard. These stories, whether they're from a book, movie, or the Museum of Tolerance all made me think about the world in a different way. It wasn't a single moment that changed me, but a long process. I am forever improving my ethical standpoint and trying to be the best person I can be, but I need a little help along the way.
Monday, February 13, 2017
Witness to Tolerance
This really happened. These events occurred in real life and affected real people. This fact is difficult to wrap your head around when you’re an 8th grader learning about the most famous genocide in recent history; the Holocaust. We recently toured the Museum of Tolerance, which is a museum designed to educate people about this horrific tragedy. The experience is nothing like learning about it in a sheltered classroom, where the bell rings and breaks you out of their world and back into yours. The Museum of Tolerance put you in the shoes of the millions of Jews who were forced from their homes and murdered. This 3 hour experience of our tour guide’s raspy but powerful voice describing the worst acts of humanity, simulated gas chambers, and the chilling words of Adolf Hitler and his followers being read out over loudspeakers will make you come out a different person than you were before you entered. The museum excels at bringing out your empathy. Their terror becomes your terror, and their suffering becomes your suffering. The sensory experience made you forget about the honking of LA traffic outside and put you in 1940s Germany. TVs lined the walls, displaying photographs of mass graves piled with dead bodies while recordings played of laughing Nazi generals telling their compatriots to finish their drinks. Our tour guide brought us to a model of the gates of hell and beyond. Many of us cried for them and their pain, but some felt detached because they didn’t want to think about all the innocent men, women, and children who were murdered with no remorse. They lived and died in the past. We can’t change what happened to them, so what are we supposed to do to help them? This question has been asked many times, and our guide gave us an answer. We have a responsibility to make sure everyone remembers the horrors of the Holocaust so it may never happen again.
Monday, February 6, 2017
A Poem From a Union Soldier's Boots
I am leather, soft and worn out from use
I have seen horrors and I have seen victory
I have trudged on through mud
I have splashed through creeks running red with blood from the fallen
“War is hell”, someone said
Then I guess I’ve been to hell and back
You’ve never seen things like I’ve seen
You’ve never been where I been
I have stood upon many battlegrounds
Grounds soaked with the blood of human beings
I have been cleaned more times than I can count
Cleaned of dirt, mud, blood, and tears
I have seen too many tears streaming down faces as young as 16
Pray, children, pray you will never see those people or be those people
I have walked through tragedy.
Thursday, January 5, 2017
Dear Mr. President
Dear President Taylor,
I understand your need to conquer the land. You think the world is for your taking, and you think people are too. I am a slave and I think this country is strong and beautiful, but extremely hypocritical. You speak of freedom from tyranny, yet you keep humans as property. I understand abolishing slavery in the East may take time, and I'm willing to accept that. However, we have the chance to create new free states in the West. We have the opportunity to make states that have never known the horror of slavery. The Compromise of 1850 is not enough. I'm glad they are free states, but they will never truly be so until the Compromise changed. When a slave escapes to a free state, that should mean they are immediately free. Please consider the children ripped from their mothers and sold off like objects, going on to be mistreated and sometimes killed. The West could be a safe haven for people like them, and people like me. Please consider preventing slavery from spreading West.
Best Regards,
Emily R.
I understand your need to conquer the land. You think the world is for your taking, and you think people are too. I am a slave and I think this country is strong and beautiful, but extremely hypocritical. You speak of freedom from tyranny, yet you keep humans as property. I understand abolishing slavery in the East may take time, and I'm willing to accept that. However, we have the chance to create new free states in the West. We have the opportunity to make states that have never known the horror of slavery. The Compromise of 1850 is not enough. I'm glad they are free states, but they will never truly be so until the Compromise changed. When a slave escapes to a free state, that should mean they are immediately free. Please consider the children ripped from their mothers and sold off like objects, going on to be mistreated and sometimes killed. The West could be a safe haven for people like them, and people like me. Please consider preventing slavery from spreading West.
Best Regards,
Emily R.
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
The Red Planet
We weren’t meant to live here. At least, that’s what some say. They say that our bodies weren’t designed to live on our home, the planet Mars. They say that it isn’t fate, that God or evolution or whichever higher powers you believe in intended us to only live on Earth. Those who inhabit the planet we have made our home think differently. We know that instead of physically evolving, the first humans to cross the stars instead evolved with their minds. It is because of their advanced technology that we can now walk freely without space suits, and breathe the air. Being cooped up in suits or oxygen containment units is distant history. The children born today can’t imagine life anywhere else and hardly believe that humans are originally from the blue dot, faraway in the sky. The story of the first people to travel through the stars is one that inspires us and makes people believe that anything is possible. The original star-travelers were a group of 5 brave souls who knew their planet was in trouble and stepped up to save it. Their captain was named Perseverance. She was chosen for her importance and leadership skills. Many people believe she was the most important member of her crew, but that was a highly debated topic. It was also a popular opinion that her right- hand man, Technology, was the most important. He was the one who made the trip possible, with his innovation building the means to get to the planet we were always meant to go. The rest of the crew are all crucial to the mission as well. Agriculture himself made life on Mars possible, and he single-handedly fertilized the soil on Mars which was thought to be impossible. Even though she didn’t have much experience, Compassion was vital to the mission, and no one would’ve survived without it. She helped the crew work together to solve problems and helped them realize that they were all important and they didn’t have to compete. The last crew member was named Curiosity. Nobody would’ve even dared go out into the stars without her. She drove everyone forward, and some argue she alone was responsible for the idea of going, the rest of the crew volunteering, and all the effort that was put into making the first steps towards what is now our home. They left Earth, and it is said they were lifted by the hand of God. God could only take them so far, because he had to watch over the rest of the people left on Earth. They were on their own, but Perseverance and Curiosity helped the rest through. They narrowly avoided asteroids and comets, and even the Sun threatened to end their journey. The biggest threat they faced was a stowaway named Fear. Fear tried to get them to turn back and tried to convince them that it wasn’t worth it and they were never going to get there. Fear was starting to get to some of the crew members’ heads, creeping in when they were weakest. Just as they became sure that they should turn around, they saw the red planet rise in front of them. It was everything they imagined, and it gave Perseverance her strength back. She banished Fear from the ship, and they continued to the planet. As you can see today, their colonization is now the great civilization that we live in. Although we lost contact with Earth over a century ago, we still believe that they are out there and they may come to us. We offer our thanks the original 5 members every day for making our world a reality.
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