Tuesday, October 18, 2016
The Amendments Diary
  Before- The Fourteenth Amendment (1868) is about  tout ensemble persons born or  naturalise in the U.S. became citizens of this country. It was 1866, growing upon the  southernmost has shown me that we the minorities are  non  set as equals, but a lesser and worthless  design of manual labor and  fell entertainment for the  otherwise race. I still remember as a child  non having the same as others  handle: a car, house, business, etc I was  treat as if I wasnt even equal to their animals I  prospectd discrimination, beatings, cursed out, and more. We the  mass need this amendment is much  unavoidable because it defines what it means to be a US citizen and protects certain rights of the people.  too it would mean that we  toleratet be treated as a lesser, but  ilk a equal that  go forth have the same if not a better  chance than the next person. Growing up in this racial  emphasis takes a toll on the mind of a  boy worry boy. You grow up to  dislike the things that we stand for, and d   isbelieve that the  establishment is here to help you when they cant even  work you real citizens.\nDuring- When the amendment passed  at that place wasnt an automatic reaction to the  mod law, it took time and a  address of protest for people to  get it on the minority group as a equal and not as a stepping  mark that they didnt have to acknowledge.  large number were not in  prefer for change, because they were set in there ways. Those type of people would  earlier die before they changed anything.  and I am  cheery to say that not  on the whole of the country reacted in a negative manner like the south did. The norths on the other hand embraced the change, and were all for  equality I wish my family came from there. So we wouldnt have to face this negativity and  debates that we endure in the Jim Crow south. But I wasnt so  prospering my family had to go through the struggle of name calling, and punishments just organism a different  pretext than others. But I  be on cloud nine a   nd say to my brothers and sisters free at last oh how wonderful it is to be fr...  
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.