Unit 10 DB 1 Lawyer and Lawyer v. City of Council Bluffs, Iowa The case of Timothy LAWYER and Michael Lawyer, Plaintiffs, v. CITY OF COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA was very interesting. Once this learner reviewed the video she understood the law, but also understood the Lawyers fear as well. This case went from bad to worst in the worst way. Lawyer and Lawyer Lawyer and Lawyer, two brothers about 17 and age 23 were pulled over for a traffic stop in regards to speeding on the 26th of March, 1999, at about 2am.…
In modern day Latin America people struggle for even the most basic of human needs such as water, sanitation, and food. Governments in many countries do little to help lift the people out of poverty and give way to a higher quality of life for the poor while letting companies with vast resources come into their country, take their resources, and in return do little other than pay a meager wage to those who labor for these companies. The systems that are put in place by forced democracy are meant to keep separation between the rich and the poor. Three movies that depict how these systems work, or don’t work, are City of God, Even the Rain, and Trinkets and Beads. These movies have commonalities that the people of Latin America deal with day to day like loyalty, poverty, drug trafficking, slums, and exploitation of the indigenous people.…
| ‘ | Martin is very aware of what people think of him during this chapter and the writer shows this when he talks about Martin’s awareness of others in the club. | Point | Evidence | Explanation | | ‘Martin was quick to interrupt. “No way, man, that place is for soft kids. Table tennis, pool, tiddlywinks – that’s no way to spend your Saturday night.’” (p.30) | This demonstrates that Martin doesn’t want to be seen as a ‘soft kid’ he wants to be cool and go to cool places.…
Bruno, a character from the City of Orphans, sat in the grime of New York City’s streets and thought to himself how he “can’t remember when he wasn’t by himself, finding ways to live on his own. Now like always, he’ll have to take care of himself.” (Avi, 304) This child represents the children who resorted to crime during the late eighteenth century and early nineteenth century of New York City. Times were hard during this moment of history to the point that many children needed to work in order to survive. Some became factory workers and newspaper boys.…
What evidence did you see that learning theory was applicable to explaining why/how the author became delinquent? Which specific learning theories are useful in explaining his delinquency and the criminal behavior of others in the story? Which types of delinquency were a direct result of learning from intimate others? • Reymundo Sanchez will growing up in an abusive household. His step-father beat him and his mother would finish him off.…
To be misunderstood, misinterpreted, and mislead are three very profound ways to describe the young girls the Brownie troop had encountered. In the short-story “Brownies” there is a fine line between being a positive and negative role model. Arnetta is a very persuading young lady who we are introduced to early in the story. Although the story is told through the view of “Snot” (Packer 56), we see how the author illustrates the essentialness of how admiring someone can lead to a dishonoring conclusion.…
Ponyboy was really the first person I could express my opinions to and the first person I could really talk to about how I feel about this stupid social division we have to go by. Even though he doesn’t really understand how we Socs have problems too, I can see that he at least sort of understands- not completely, but just a little… Knowing that he sort of understands is a mixed feeling of relief and just a bit of an absurd feeling as well, I mean, a Soc and a greaser actually having a nice conversation.. I didn’t expect him to actually understand at all, but I also didn’t expect him to be completely ignorant about it either. “Cherry, look what’s coming,” Marcia quickly addressed. I watched the blue Mustang as it was coming down the street.…
In social structural theories criminologist are understanding the correlation between individuals and their interactions with others. By looking at the interaction they are able to determine the cause of crime. Monster by Sanyika Shakur is a memoir about his gang life that started when he was eleven years old. Throughout his gang life he becomes the baddest gang member alive while his time was spent in and out of jail. Later into his life he came to a realization that the gang life was not going to help support him and his family.…
In Punished by Victor Rios, besides labeling, opportunity theory of crime is the most visible in the lives of the young men because for most of the participants, the only available opportunities for survival are through crime or other deviant behavior. In chapter 3, Rios follows two boys who each found their way into crime because of the lack of other options. In the case of Tyrell, with his father being unable to get a real job, Tyrell saw selling drugs as the only way to make money with which to support himself. “They chose to commit a crime,” Rios comments of the boys in his study, “consciously calculating the potential risk of arrest and incarceration. Many of the boys came to this assessment after believing that they had no other choice,…
The hero in the Outsiders could be more than one person, from Ponyboy even to Steve! But there is always one character that sticks out from the others, and that character is, Johnny Cade. Johnny was the character people would least expect to be the hero of the story, he was nice, helped others, and even saved someone's life! But others like Pony and Dally can be considered heroes just for willing to help others if needed. But Johnny did more than just help others and be nice, he was a hero.…
Within Evan Hunter’s two short stories; “The Last Spin” and “On the Sidewalk, Bleeding”, the idea and concept that gangs are destructive are constructed and developed by using many narrative conventions. The short story of “The last Spin” is a narrative about two teenagers from opposing gangs, playing a game of Russian Roulette in order to settle a disagreement between the gangs they are representing. “On the Sidewalk, Bleeding” is a short story about Andy, a teenager had just been stabbed and in his final moments he contemplates his identity and future. Evan Hunter uses the narrative conventions of theme, plot, and characterisation in order to get across the message that gangs are destructive. Within the plots of both narratives, Evan…
The Friendship Of Change In the coming of age novel A Separate Peace by John Knowles, a struggling friendship of a change of heart between characters Gene and Finny takes place. In the beginning of the novel, Gene’s envious mindset and lack of communication with Finny, results in a one sided friendship where Gene does not share the same feelings of their companionship as Finny. By the end, Gene grows up to recognize that his childish ways were wrong, and how blinded he really is from reality.…
"The Masked Truth" is a thrilling and terrifying novel written by author, Kelley Armstrong. The book "The Masked Truth", is about a young girl named Riley, the first POV, who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after experiencing a murder that occured to the couple she was babysitting their kid for while hiding under the bed with their daughter. Since then, nightmares and guilt overshadow her former self. In an effort to return to who she was before the tragedy, she agrees to attend a weekend therapy camp held in a rebuilt warehouse. After the camp attendees are taken hostage by three masked men, Riley and another patient named Max, the other POV, have dig deep to trust each other in order to escape the warehouse.…
An organization’s culture can hinder or help the organization in its efforts to achieve the entailed mission. Culture can be facilitated by the organization itself or outside influences such as the culture and behavior of the persons employed there. The latter was the case with regard to Korean Air pilots (captain, first officer, and flight engineer). Multiple factors crippled the airline agency and contributed to the continuance of airplane crashes, however the most significant was that of human error. Dorner (1996), identifies how human interactions with complex systems such as nuclear power plants and for the purposes of this essay, airlines can contribute to failure.…
Eastwood and Harlem, both small neighborhoods in America, are weighed down by the world’s view of them; poor, predominantly black, violent and in need of “help” (Ralph 9). In Renegade Dreams, Ralph tells the story of activists, gang leaders, patients and teenagers while constantly refusing to portray them as victims. He gives us a glimpse into Eastwood, “a community that was battered but far from beaten.” Caught in the bonds of racism and poverty, the Fontenelles appeared Parks’ article A Harlem Family, in Life Magazine. Through his photography Parks shows families within a community facing interlocking political and economic problems.…