authenticitease
21p14 comments posted · 2 followers · following 1
14 years ago @ World In Conversation - Voices From The Classroom · 0 replies · +1 points
However, I believe also that if he was a black man victimizing other black children this would be a non-issue. This may seem crass and heartless, maybe even too much, but it's honestly my opinion. No one would care, it would be an open and shut case. Black-on-black crime as it were is almost never reported on or taken seriously. And if reported on, it's a small snippet, like Sandusky's face in comparison to Joe Paterno's on the front of any newspaper in the United States last week. For some reason it isn't something that is ever considered a worry for every day society. I suppose our doings are simply not as dire.
14 years ago @ World In Conversation - Voices From The Classroom · 0 replies · +1 points
It’s ridiculous how some assume that illegal immigrants are taking jobs, please. American industry hasn’t wanted Americans since the 1860s. With the labor unions, the strikes, the overall bullshit, they’ve been wanting to take their business elsewhere for years. Don’t be mad because they decide to hire people who WILL do what they want. At first, it was the white people who said they’d had enough of being degraded and they didn’t want these jobs. Black people and the Chinese filled in and took the jobs. Then, Black people which was most of the labor force said they too had had enough. The Hispanics have gladly taken our place, and they do it because they have the drive as those before them had. We ought not get angry with them because they take feeding their families more seriously than real Americans do. That’s pathetic on the part of us as citizens. If I had a child, I would do anything and everything to make sure my child had a full stomach before I’d even had a glass of water in that day. That’s the way life should be. That’s the way life was. But now, everyone is spoiled.
When Hispanics get tired, they get more established, they too decide not to be degraded, we’ll have another group of some sort that is “stealing” all the jobs most people wouldn’t take if it paid $18 an hour. Until then, if I had a business, and I actually wanted shit to get done without all the labor union mess, I would hire them. It’s like asking me if I want to make money.
14 years ago @ World In Conversation - Voices From The Classroom · 0 replies · +1 points
There’s only one problem I have with immigration. And you can call me ignorant though I don’t believe I am. Perhaps America doesn’t have a “national language” or what have you, but last I read, checked or have seen everyone has spoken or learned to speak English. Did we take the land, sure we did. Was it right, absolutely not, but did it happen? Yes indeed. And ever since then we’ve all spoken English when we got to the bank, when you turn on C-SPAN. The constitution does not have portions in French, Spanish and German as well as English, at least it did not when it was written and I believe that if that’s what they wanted to do they would have done it. My family was forced to learn English upon arrival to this country. I think it is an incredible slap in the face when I go to the supermarket and everything is in English and Spanish and on some labels Spanish is first. I don’t think so. Immigrants are free to come here and make a living however they please but changing the way the country is run in order to accommodate them is absolutely ridiculous and an insult to the immigrants that have come here over the course of HUNDREDS of years. NONE of them received special treatment and no one EVER should. I’ve gone to supermarkets, stood in line, heard a mother talking to her child in English and then go to the teller and speak Spanish because she can. My family cannot go to Walmart and speak to people in French (which is dominantly spoken in our home, between our relatives) and get the same service. And quite frankly they shouldn’t. If it was like that, it should have been easy for everyone to come here. That is the only aspect of laziness that I have seen. It needs to stop. They knew exactly what they were coming here for, catering to them is another thing, and catering to only the Hispanics is ALSO another thing. When we start catering to languages of all the major peoples in America (people from El Salvador and Mexico are not the only immigrants but of course nobody knows that) I will have no complaints. But until then, we speak English here, not German, not French, not Portugese, not Italian, not Gaelic. English. Just because it isn’t on paper doesn’t mean it isn’t national.
14 years ago @ World In Conversation - Voices From The Classroom · 0 replies · +1 points
The reason most people see it as posing is because in this day in age that’s all people do, become other people. Listening to the Carter III, buying it, and hanging out with people who wear shirts that say Free Weezy and are black does not make you black. It means you like rap. If you think it makes you “black”, you are posing. Buying a Daddy Yankee t-shirt and calling yourself El Salvadorian when you are not is posing. Putting on a cardigan and some loafers and dancing to Rick Astley calling yourself the whitest person anyone shall ever meet if you are indeed a different race is posing, even if you are half white. Call yourself yourself, and that’s who you are. It’s only posing when you change your original self to something completely unrecognizable.
14 years ago @ World In Conversation - Tax Dollars at War · 0 replies · +1 points
The amount of money that we spend on militarizing ourselves is better spent elsewhere. Perhaps you think this war is necessary, cool. But if you say that we could be spending the rest of our money on MORE weapons, you’ve got serious debilitating issues. I think we’re more than enough protecting. 9/11 didn’t change a thing; we were only unprepared because the government chose to take a blind eye, if they hadn’t, we would have been MORE than prepared. And yes, I believe that. We would’ve been ready and waiting. But we weren’t, and it isn’t because we were on a shortage of AK-47s. Honestly I think us buying all these weapons is to benefit those lucky arms dealers that are making money off of dead soldiers. It’s sick, it’s wrong, and it is fact, not fiction.
I apologize for sounding like a rampant liberal but it’s annoying to hear people complain about how the government or the president or whatever is expecting them to come along and give us all four acres and a mule, oh and a check for $40,000 please! It’s not gonna happen. They are broke phi broke, they ain’t got it. And that would be because at the same time that we all want individual financial security (but not for THOSE people, no way, they chose that) we want them to buy more weapons to protect us from those terrorists. Perhaps this isn’t still true, perhaps people have finally woken up, but after the mockery of American government and laws between the years of 2000 to 2008, I bit my tongue, and I don’t think I could take it anymore. This person’s right, it isn’t our tax dollars at work, it’s our tax dollars at war.
14 years ago @ World In Conversation - Voices From The Classroom · 0 replies · +1 points
On the Hispanic side of this argument, I have heard accounts of friends, and they’re not incredibly accepting either. Though I have a roommate who is Hispanic and is gay, she was accepted. As far as males go, I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that they are not. The males that I’ve talked to have the same uncomfortable view towards gays, and from speaking to a friend I’ve been told that their culture is heavily embedded in Roman Catholicism, which more or less isn’t okay with anything. So to me, other races are less accepting, though it all depends on the situation. I’ve heard worse accounts from white individuals, etc. It all depends.
14 years ago @ World In Conversation - Voices From The Classroom · 0 replies · +1 points
White people. Caucasians. The majority. They’re more pink than they are white, but they’re called white. I don’t see any kind of Asian in them and sometimes, they’re the minority in a group. Things they are. There’s a lot of things I know about them, a lot of them are my friends. But the one thing they always tell me, always ask me to help them with, is this “fact” that they can’t dance. I don’t believe that. I don’t care, I’ve danced with plenty of white men and it’s kind of painful, no lie, but I don’t think it’s because they inherently don’t know how to dance. I think the pressure of everyone telling them that they could never dance is what makes them not dance. I think the idea of having to dance with a black girl with a curvy butt makes them concentrate far too hard on – well, I’m not sure – but it’s about how much they think about things. No idea why they do it, but they do. It’s not about them being white. It’s about them thinking dancing is something that’s learned. It’s something that can be taught, but you have to feel it inside, or you’ll never be able to move an inch.
I also don’t believe all men are hard, and unemotional. I’ve met a lot of guys here at Penn State and every single one of them has gotten emotional around me and more frequently than I. I’m more likely to get angry, get frustrated, get annoyed, but they get sad more frequently than I have. They’ve been hurt more than me, and sometimes they react with anger, but I’ve seen them look low. Men are not at all what people think they are. They have hearts too and every day I discover that, because I can be ignorant of it. But I feel like society doesn’t allow them to feel any kind of way and when something happens to them, they don’t know how to handle it. I’ve seen them feel some sort of way about things for the longest amount of times, even when I myself wouldn’t care anymore. They’re so different. They’re soft on the inside, and to be honest? That isn’t wrong in the least.
14 years ago @ World In Conversation - Voices From The Classroom · 0 replies · +1 points
14 years ago @ World In Conversation - Everyone Respond to Th... · 0 replies · +1 points
I watched Manouchka’s video, where her business was based around familial trinkets like photo frames, and accessories like hair barrettes, bracelets and other things for women. I love this because women are always the more heavy-handed consumers, and this will gain more revenue. Women all around the world like to feel and look beautiful, so her business is a good idea to fund, because things like hair products and accessories will fly off the shelves. The family photos will also be popular I think because Haiti has a very family oriented culture and things like this would be prized there.
I also watched Madame Lamour’s video. Marriage is also something that would be, I expect, big in Haiti. Since family is a big thing, marriage ought to come hand in hand, so marriage decoration is a given. This could and would be very marketable for this reason. It’s made by another Haitian, and the things she makes are gorgeous, though not necessarily over the top like more than half of the things seen in David’s Bridal. I think with expansion and funds she too could go far.
Lastly I watched Suze’s video. As a kid I loved candied peanuts so this was definitely a favorite of mine. I think this is marketable just because it’s a sweet treat and everybody loves those. Candied peanuts are delicious and pretty cheap so she could definitely get this out to masses easily if she had more production. It’s pretty big for what it’s worth already, yet still I could use some help. Again, it’s a good idea to start an economy from the bottom up with the citizens of the country itself. Have Haitians buying from Haitians.
Out of all of these projects I would have to say my favorite is Madame Lamour’s shop. It’s the best out there because people are always going to get married and need things for a wedding, but certain materials can go out of style (photo frames, etc) however Suze’s peanuts are also an adequate choice. The wedding business is very big in America and could be just as huge in Haiti after a lot of diligence and harder work. This could be a very lucrative market.
14 years ago @ World In Conversation - Madame Lamour · 0 replies · +1 points