Monday, September 28, 2020

Post (4): Antiwar Voices

 Antiwar.com and the American Conservative, are websites that bring to light a lot of antiwar voices. These voices are very strong and devoted to getting their message across. But why don't we hear these voices or what they have to say on mainstream media?

News services and people that run social media apps have a strict protocol of what they can and cannot say or put out. For instance, if you watch the news then you know that they have already scripted lines of what they are supposed to say. But sometimes they give their own opinions but they know what subjects they are allowed to touch on and some that they are not. I think that antiwar conversations are one of the things on the NOT list. Because if our country was about to start a war, and there was a mainstream news anchor telling about how they feel that war is not the way, and that there are other options, how would the listeners take that? I am pretty sure that they would listen to what they have to say and a lot of people would process their thoughts and maybe agree. Which would lead to protests and other things of the sort, and cause a lot of commotion in the country. A lot of the people that write on the sites are not big time names so if one happens to come across one of the sites, it may not be of much interest to them because of the fact that they don't know anything about the writers.


FSU students marching as protest against the Vietnam War-- Tallahassee, Florida 




Friday, September 25, 2020

Post (3): The Six Freedoms and the Black Lives Matter Movement

 

Often times we scream "Black Lives Matter", but are we screaming it because we want to see equality and justice for all? Or do we just want to be apart of the trend and we want people to see us as "anti-racist". Often times I hear it, I just feel like it is because of the latter. 

The First Amendment is fundamental to all life in America because it protects the freedoms of speech, assembly, press, and religion, and the violence that the police constantly brings to our country threatens the safety of everybody in this country, regardless of race, ethnicity, religion,etc.

The First Amendment, does in fact agree with the Black Lives Matter Protests. The first amendment clearly protects the right of peaceable protests. If this is in the first amendment, why do people and a lot of police officers still have a problem with it? You might say that they only have a problem when the protests turn into violence and rioting. I am here to prove to you that that is a false claim. For example, we can refer to when the a New York City police officer ripped a mask off of a young black man's face and began to pepper spray the young man, while the man was just standing there with his hands up. Or we can refer to the time when another New York City police officer was in a moving vehicle, and he slammed someone in his car door and drove away. Or maybe, if that is not enough, we can refer to the time when I was at a peaceful protest, everybody was laying down for 9 minutes in honor of George Floyd, and close to the end of time a car was let through the police barrier around the protesters and they came full speed towards everybody on the ground, and right after this the police sped away. They allowed that to happen.

Even though the amendment protects the power of the peaceable protests, it does not protect the looting, rioting, and violence. This is something that I do not agree with, especially considering that most of the people looting, rioting, and destroying businesses were mainly Caucasian people. 



Nelson White, one of my friends, poet and activist
very adamant about the lives of black people, in the middle of a protest.

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Post (2): The Supreme Court

The Nine Supreme Court Justices.

 The Supreme Court, established in 1789, is the highest federal court in the country and has the power to oversee the actions of two other branches of government. When the Supreme Court was first formed it was made up of six justices, now nine justices hold power in the Supreme Court (as pictured above). The justices are nominated by the U.S. president and approved or denied by the U.S. Senate. There is also a chief justice, the one in charge of presiding over the Court and setting the agenda for weekly meetings, he or she is also required to sit on the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution, they also preside over impeachment hearings.

According to the Supreme Court Procedures, the Supreme Court gets more than 7,000 cases a year, but they only choose to accept about 100-150. The cases that they do choose to accept impact our country, either for better or for worse. For example, the Dred Scott v. Sanford  was a decade-long fight for freedom by an enslaved black man named Dred Scott. The case went through a number of smaller courts and eventually ended up at the Supreme Court. On May 15,1854, Scott lost his case in federal court therefore he and his family members were held in slavery. Scott appealed his case to the Supreme Court, but this time he had many people in his corner, like abolitionists, powerful politicians, and high profile attorneys. Unfortunately, that was not enough and on March 6, 1857, the Supreme Court ruled against Scott, causing him to lose his freedom once again. Meanwhile, in 1896, they ruled in favor of upholding state segregation laws, with the Plessy v. Ferguson case.

 

The Dred Scott Decision.

The Supreme Court also handled and still handle important cases as well. Just to name a couple, Mapp v. Ohio, which said that evidence obtained illegally cannot be used in a court of law, and Lawrence v. Texas, which struck down state anti-sodomy laws.



Thursday, September 3, 2020

Post (1): My Top News Sources



1) ABC 11

- I use ABC11 because it is the local news station for the Raleigh-Durham, whenever I want to know what is going on in my community then I can always rely on them for the information. Every time I go to my grandparents' houses then they are always watching ABC11. It is also always the first thing that pops up on the television every time I turn it on.
~Picture from ABC 11, my brothers on the front line from a George Floyd protest this summer.

2) Shaun King

- Shaun King is a very well known activist for the minority community, every time something happens I can always count on him to have the news about it. A lot of his posts are controversial if you are against basic human rights, and for that he is the number 1 target for white supremacists, and he had many police officers plotting to kill him, which means he's obviously doing something right. He is also hated by a few African American and or black people, because they accuse him of not seeking out justice, but promoting himself through the black man's demise and their injustice. But, the truth is he makes no money off of the book that he promotes.


3)The Shade Room

- The Shade Room is a page on Instagram that covers just about everything you want to know. They give you the news on celebrities, politics, and so many things of the sort. Most of the time, The Shade Room has all the correct information, verified a lot of times by the people themselves. With 20.4 million followers, The Shade Room has become a viable news source for a lot of the generations, even the older people, they even constantly have people checking their page that do not even follow them. The Shade Room also has a teens page with 2.2 million followers, both pages being verified.

4)Fox News

- I rarely get my news from here considering ABC11 is big in my hometown, but when I cannot find what I am looking for on ABC then I always come here as my second resource for television news coverage. Even if ABC11 does have the news up there then I still sometimes come to Fox because they could have more on the issue at hand, while ABC is still gathering their information.

5)Durham Herald Sun

The Durham Herald Sun is a newspaper in my hometown, and unless I'm in a doctor's or dentists office or maybe even my Grandma's house then I might read it but other than that I never read the newspaper. When I was younger, I used to wait for the paper boy to come and when he got to the house, I would run outside, barefoot and all, to bring the newspaper inside. Then, I would read the comics in there and I would also do the crosswords, and read the sports section, etc.
~A picture of an article that was in the papers