¶ … Election of Obama and the Problems of the Social Dynamic
There has not been any positive change in social dynamics as a result of the election of the first African-American president. If anything, race relations have worsened under the Obama Administration: the Black Lives Matter movement has come into being as a result of police violence on black citizens; there is a definite push back against the Politically Correct crowd in Washington and its depiction of certain words and expressions as being taboo in modern society (while leaders like Trump poll exceptionally well among the electorate, indicating that there is a deep and wide divide between those who embrace Political Correctness and those who challenge it). The social dynamic between whites and blacks is tense and continues to be tense on a nationwide level (with the Trayvon Martin incident igniting protests across the nation), and gender issues are just as controversial as ever, with North Carolina recently making headlines because of a bill to limit transgender individuals from using the public restroom designated for the gender with which they identify. Numerous celebrities and high-profile persons have attacked the state while others have supported it. Famous transgender Caitlyn Jenner used the female restroom in Trump Tower after Trump publicly stated that she could use any restroom she wants in his facility. So many factors and variables are at play in society that it is impossible for the election of one African-American to the office of the President to really change the direction and interplay of all these variables and resolve issues and tensions that have deep roots in American life, society, politics and economics. This paper will explain these factors and show what occurred on a social level that generated the advent of Obama's political ascent and how conditions have worsened overall regardless of his ascent.
The fact that America has the highest prison population on the planet (and that he majority of the inmates are overwhelmingly minority persons) points to a very dangerous and underlying fundamental problem in American society. Minorities are looked down upon as second-class citizens and they always have been in America. America was founded as a country by and for WASPs (White Anglo-Saxon Protestants) and everyone else was just someone to be exploited. Slavery was ended by Lincoln, not because he believed in equality (he wanted to send the blacks back to Africa) but because it was an expedient way to destabilize the South and undermine the Southern social order. After the war, Jim Crow laws continued to oppress the so-called "free" blacks and in order to escape racism in the South, the blacks moved to urban areas in the North where oppression in the form of wage slavery continued, as it does today. However, today's slavery is also institutionalized in the form of legislation that targets black communities, such as today's drug laws. (It is legal to purchase one's drug from Big Pharma but not from a young black man on the street corner). Thus, minorities are imprisoned and put to work for Big Business, working for a dollar a day wages for companies like Sony and Nike. Obama's election was viewed as a great moment in American history because it supposedly represented the confirmation of equality -- but it has appeared to be a hollow victory -- like the abolition of slavery: the same underlying trends and efforts of the "deep state" continue to cause tension between the races and continue to oppress minorities.
Obama himself has not done anything to make matters any better. Upon his election he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in the hopes that he would discontinue the wars started by his predecessor Bush -- but he has done nothing but continue them, authorizing bombings in the Middle East and drone strikes that have resulted in countless dead as well as the extreme blowback of terrorist groups like ISIS that now threaten the whole of European stability and have claimed responsibility for attacks in the U.S. Obama's foreign policy has further helped to aggravate Islamaphobia in the U.S., with more and more people calling for the deportation of Muslims (this is in fact one of the campaign points of Trump -- no more Muslims allowed to enter the U.S.) but such is what happens when one wages continual war against the Muslim population in the Middle East, blowing up hospitals (Doctors Without Borders, for example), wedding...
9, compared to 8.4 for whites" (Statistics and Office of Minority Health and Health Disparities, 2005). Moreover, the paper will examine other harbingers of economic robustness in addition to income, including net worth, income ranges, and unemployment rates. If America is post-racial, then blacks should be proportionately represented in the top 5% of wealthiest people and have median economic assets equal to those of whites, not simply have equal salaries.
President Clinton's And Obama's Health Care Policies President Obama's Healthcare policies The Affordable Care Act (ACA) has drawn some comparisons to elements of past efforts, including Mitt Romney's health care plan in Massachusetts and the Clinton plan from the 1990s. This paper will mainly examine the context of the Clinton Plan vs. The ACA. After winning office, President Clinton followed up on a campaign promise to provide health care to the 37
Obama & Romney -- Foreign Policy Approaches If "realist" stands for a person who pursues "security" based on "self-interest," "determinism," and "morality" on the international scene (quotes chosen from Chapter 1); and if "liberal" stands for "capable of cooperating," "cooperation," the impact of "non-governmental groups" (NGOs), "having many interests" and "international society," then President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both reflect some of each of these traits, albeit Obama leans more
For example, one of the interesting points that grabbed my attention was Dill's discussion of gender relations among African slaves. Slave men and women had a more egalitarian relationship than free white men and women. That is because slave men did not possess the power and authority of free men. So, power is inherently corrupting? At least, this is what Dill's description of gender relations in antebellum America suggest. I
If students are misbehaving, they are not engaged in their lessons. Behavior management is, unfortunately, a priority focus at Springfield Gardens, to the detriment of instruction. This is the point that the three interviewees continued to stress. None of them blamed the teachers for failing to engage students; the fault, as they see it, lies squarely with the students whose families apparently do not place a high value on
This is just one example of how a group of Americans, based on patterns in their culture, relate to perceptions of race, class and gender in America. The connection among race, class, and gender in America is not a new subject of research. This subject has been studied for several decades, often coinciding with significant changes or events in American culture. Even with all the research, there is a lack
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