Morris P. Fiorina, who wrote The Rise of the Washington Establishment, is a political scientist who received his education from the University of Rochester as well as Allegheny College from 1968 to 1972. At the age of 70, he is currently the Professor at Stanford who teaches political science. He has multiple writings that converse about the government and even has an award for these writings. The Rise of the Washington Establishment discusses that the federal bureaucracy has taken over and turned our government into officials that only care about their positions and salary and stopped caring about the voice of the people.…
Congressional Country Club, Bethesda, Maryland: 8:05 am... “Lockwood,” said Senator Bobby Richards, “you are the only congressman who can miss your tee time by an hour and march right up to the tee and start hacking away.” After resetting his ball by pulling up the tee some, he was happy‒hoping his ball would land where he was looking. “That is about all I do anymore, is hack,” Lockwood replied, with a kid-smile, as he pulled his lucky Boston Celtic golf glove onto his right hand and then tightened the Velcro strap.…
Final Paper Assignment Many drivers risk lives daily, whether it is their own lives or others. Drivers should be more acquainted to what they are doing, and need to become more cautious to their surroundings. The risk that drivers can obtain can be very detrimental and lead to severe injuries or even death. Importantly, the drivers that are violating the rules of the road can cause consequences for drivers that are doing the right things.…
Final Paper Assignment In “Driving While Stupid” the author Dave Barry is arguing that drivers in downtown Miami on I-95 are the worst drivers in the world. However, he states other major cities, such as: Boston, the Argentinean city of Mar del Plata, and China have horrible drivers as well, but nothing compares to downtown Miami drivers in the eyes of Dave Barry. Dave Barry says that everyone thinks the worst drivers are in their city but they haven’t seen anything if they haven’t drove on the streets of downtown Miami. Dave Barry has driven in every major U.S. city as he states in the reading.…
The most fascinating fact I learned today was about the Jefferson Memorial’s location in Washington, D.C. Even though this building’s placement looks very ordinary, there was a lot of controversy surrounding the placement of the memorial, and the historical connection with the other testaments to our founding fathers. Back in the 1900s, there was a commision to create a memorial honoring our 38th President Theodore Roosevelt’s contributions to American History. There was even a contest, and the architect John Russell Pope’s design was chosen for the memorial.…
What is one of the first things you think of when someone talks about our nation’s capital? For most American Citizens, there first thoughts are government and the documents written long ago by our founding fathers. Washington D.C. Is a place where history history comes alive but history is also made. During the duration of our D.C. Trip we experienced our nation’s government and constitution in action. The right to build an army and a navy, the first amendment, and the legislative branch were all important parts of the constitution and were showcased during our class trip to our nation's capital.…
Driving in America has been a staple of being an American for decades. People have used cars as transportation to get places since the beginning of the 20th century. Getting a driver’s license has always been a great achievement for someone, knowing they can be free and go places they want to travel to. In the novel Republic of Drivers: A Cultural History of Automobility in America by Cotten Seiler, he talks about how the automobile has changed in the sense that the car has made Americans have more freedom in driving and it raises their confidence with going about their everyday lives. Driving has done wonders for the United States, and it will continue to do so as long as there are people buying cars.…
The Reason to Read The Girl who Survived is a great and exciting novel about a young girl and her struggle to survive one of the world darkest times. Her name is Bronia and she lived during the Holocaust. The reason I really wanted to read this book is because I love learning about history.…
George Washington’s Farewell Address to the People of the United States was, in essence, Washington’s last-ditch effort to keep America going on the right path before he left office. Washington could see the growing tensions spreading across America, and he knew that factors like split political parties and foreign intervention would only cause the still very young America great stress. When Washington finally made the decision to retire from office, he left behind a series of growing issues that the next president, John Adams, dealt with; however, the original plan Washington had was to retire after only one term, so the first draft of his Farwell Address, co-written with James Madison , didn’t include many of the issues Washington brought up in his publicized speech. When he turned to Alexander Hamilton to edit what Madison had originally written, Hamilton expanded on issues like “foreign affairs, and updated it to reflect the Washington Administration’s revised neutrality policy .” The final draft, published on September 19, 1796, went through several stages of revision and was edited by Thomas Jefferson and Timothy Pickering , among others, and it mainly focused on the importance of a unified government, the dangers of a two-party system, and the negative influence of getting involved in foreign affairs.…
Every new driver wonders when and how he or she will get his or her first traffic violation. I always contemplated different scenarios in my mind while driving. Would I run a stop sign? Would I be caught zooming past a police officer? Where and when would I get mine?…
The Washington Monument in Washington, D.C., is, we are told, 555 feet high -- higher than the spires of Cologne Cathedral, higher than St. Peter’s in Rome, much higher than the Pyramids. When George Washington died, in December 1799, the new federal capital had already been named in his honor. As a further gesture, the House of Representatives resolved that a marble monument should be built, “so designed as to commemorate the great events of his military and political life.” Washington’s body was to be entombed beneath the shrine. But for various reasons, some unedifying, it was never erected.…
I would like to visit Iowa because Matthew Gooi inspired me to do so. Although in the beginning of the essay he narrated Iowa as a complicated place due to the difference of culture where he came from, at the end he seems to be grateful for having the opportunity to live the experience. I have to admit that there are two things that I couldn´t agree more with him. First, I’m impressed about the animals too.…
Its not every day that the President writes an op-ed in favor of new technology. But that’s exactly what Obama did on September 19, penning an article for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette about the need for safe, reliable regulations around driverless cars. Establish Credibility: After doing a thorough research and going through several journals and peer reviews I can now say that the driverless car is a future not so away from us. Even MIT and Stanford students has started conducting surveys with moral machines where they are trying to teach a car to make moral decisions in case of severe accidents.…
My mom packed heaps of stuff and somehow, magically it all fits in this small 2 by 4 luggage bag. The taxi ride was interesting as it drove past the new empire states tower (old empire states building was destroyed in meteorite strike) which was built over a huge crater. I arrived at a motel and rented a room then set out to the museum where they are showing a free broadcast of jurassic world 10, best movie of 2063. The museum was large very large to the point where it dwarfs the entire national airport.…
Three Days in December: Resistance within the Ministerial “Seattle” had entered the annals of history before the tear gas faded from the skies over Capitol Hill. Yet, on the morning of December 1, as the national news programs were showing scenes of mayhem from the previous night, delegates arrived for the ministerial ensconced within a city effectively under martial law. Curfew had been imposed, the main streets were patrolled by phalanxes of National Guardsmen, and activists that marched toward the central business district (CBD) in an attempt to repeat the successes of the previous day were arrested en masse. U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky opened the ministerial by “expressing her regrets to Ministers . . .…