Monday, April 14, 2014

BR 4/14/14
I would like to be a preschool teacher, their starting salary is 32,500 and their average salary is 44,260.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

BR 4/10/14
$500 month budget:
$250- utility bills, I need a place to live and keep up with the expenses.
$125- food, I need to eat to survive
$50- gas, I need to be able to transport myself
$75- miscellaneous, restaurants/shopping

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

BR 4/8/14
The article is basically saying that minimum wage will be raised to $10.50. He will be signing the bills next week hoping it will pass. If they do he believes people will be able to make an honest living. Which sounds good until everything else in the world prices will sky rocket.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Citizen Test
17 out of 25
BR 4/7/14
  1. Speak English. It doesn't have to be fluent, but they need to answer/understand basic questions and conversation.
  2. Willing to work and maintain a job.
  3. I think they should pass some sort of test, but not as in depth as the one we have now. They will not pass with anything lower than a 75%.

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Assignment 4/3/14
a. Who?
b.What did he or she do?
c.When did he or she live?
d. Where did he or she live?
e. Why did he or she do what he or she did?
f. How did he or she live during segregation

Wednesday, April 2, 2014



1.) The peoples faces reflect that they are here to help and that people might want their help so they should probably stop discriminating them.
2.) I feel like this could happen today with all of the gun control issues. Some people think that we shouldn't be allowed to have guns, but I feel they do more good than damage.
3.) The Indians are standing there, to me, looks like they are standing their ground and what they believe in.
4.) During this time, America was trying to discriminate against the Indians because they owned so much land and were very violent.
BR 4/2/14
I think the hardest part of the discrimination project will be listening to everyone's negative opinions, or really just opinion that I don't agree with. It just makes me mad to have to listen to people talk about how whites are better than blacks, or Hispanics need to go back to where they came from, etc. I don't agree with it, nor do I want to hear it.

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Chapter 21 Notes

4/1/14
Heterogenous: different people, cultures, etc.
Immigrants: legal aliens that move to another country
Reservation: public land given to the Indians from the government.
Refugee: move for protection purposes.
Assimilation: adapting to another culture.

4/2/14
Population of the US is mostly white.
Immigrants have arrived in near record numbers every since the 1960s.
Populations that have grown: African American, Hispanic American, Asian American.
Minority populations exceed white populations in: California, Hawaii, New Mexico, and Texas.
There are more females than males in the US
African Americans:
  • They have been the victims of consistent and deliberate unjust treatment for a longer time.
  • They are 14% of all American population
  • Most of the gains in discriminations have been made by African Americans
Native Americans:
  • When American settlers arrived in the mid 1600s and nearly a million of then were Native Americans.
  • American Settlers brought diseases that the Indian Population was not used too.
  • Poverty, Joblessness, and alcoholism still plague Indian tribes.
  • Passed The Indian Education Act of 1972, which still isn't working to their benefit.
  • Higher infant mortality rate.
Hispanic Americans:
  • Spanish speaking background.
  • Largest minority group today 50 million in the US
  • Four subgroups: Mexican Americans, Puerto Ricans, Cuban Americans, Central and South Americans.
Asian Americans:
  • Came for employment
  • Chinese laborers were the first Asians to come to America in large numbers in the 1850 & 1086s.
  • WWII all Japanese were evacuated to the Pacific Coast, even native born.
  • Congress eventually admitted this was wrong and unjust
  • Women were treated unfairly; education, property rights, and employment opportunities.
  • It is illegal to pay women less than men
4/7/14
Those who oppose Civil Rights often believe you cant change mortality by passing a law.
1870s-1950s: no meaningful legislation passed in regards to civil rights.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964: passed after the longest debate in Senate history (83 days) Made changes in:
  • Voting provisions
  • Public Services
  • Federal Funding Programs
  • Employers and labor union
Civil Rights Act of 1968: aka "Open Housing Act" - cannot refuse selling/rent living space to a person due to race, religion, national origin, physical disability, etc.
Title IX: forbids discrimination on the basis of gender in any educational program or programming regarding financial assistance.

Affirmative Action:
  • Requires employers take positive steps to fix the affects of past discrimination
  • Employers must meet quotas for minority groups/genders
  • Many argue this results un reverse discrimination: discrimination against the majority group.
  • "Color blind"
  • California, Washington, Michigan, and Nebraska voters passed measures to eliminate all affirmative action plans
Bakke Case:
*Allan Bakke sued the University of California because he was denied access to their medical school due to Affirmative Action (16/100 seats were reserved for minority students)
* He won the case

Justice Sandra Day O'Connor predicts in 25 years, the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary.

4/8/14
An American citizen is a person that swears allegiance to the U.S. and is entitled to its protection and privileges of its laws.
The 14th amend. was the first constitutional definition: "All persons born or naturalized in the U.S. and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the U.S. and of the State wherein they reside."
The constitution declares becoming a American citizen by birth or naturalization.
Naturalization: legal process by which a person can become a citizen of another country some time after birth. Congress has exclusive power to provide for naturalization. (normally done individually)
Collective Naturalization: entire group can be granted citizenship through en masse. This normally happens when the U.S gains a territory. They are naturalized by an act or treaty.

Loss of Citizenship:
  • You have the right to abandon your citizenship through Expatriation.
  • It is illegal for Congress to take away citizenship.
  • Naturalized can lose their citizenship through denaturalization- only occurs by a court after proof of foraged papers/cheating on test.
  • Marriage does not make a person a citizen: only shortens the process of naturalization.
Immigration:
  •  Congress has power to regulate with inward & outward immigrants
  • Quotas for immigration
  • Immigration act of 1965- did away with the quota system. immigrants are allowed in the US each year.
  • Immigration act of 1990: governs the admission of aliens in the US
  • Some are denied: criminals, mentally ill who might harm, etc.
  • Deportation- legal process in which aliens must leave the country

BR 4/1/14
I don't think it should be mandatory. I think it could make a difference for some people, but not for everyone. They should be able to try it and see if they like it, and if they do, awesome; if they don't, they shouldn't have to have it.