deals with the specifics of commerce, mostly with commerce “among the states.” With the commerce clause being viewed from many different perspectives over time, it has given great importance to the meaning of our laws and regulations that we have set today. These three cases alone along with the Obamacare act, have affected the way interstate commerce is viewed. The most commonly used commerce clause in Article 1, Section 8, of the Constitution, is the cause of the “power to regulate…
My diorama is showing racial segregation. The people decided that separate was equal even though it was not. It is showing that “white people” must go to a school just for whites and “colored people” at a school just for colored people. In Brown v. Board of Education colored children were not allowed to attend schools with white children under laws that required segregation by race. It all started when Linda Brown and many other children were denied admission into a whites only school called…
Plaintiffs conclude that segregation was unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Brown case served as a spark for the civil rights movement, inspiring education reform everywhere, and changing the legal means of challenging segregation in all areas of society. In all except for one case, a three judge federal district court cited Plessy vs. Ferguson in denying relief under the “separate but equal” doctrine. Plaintiffs concluded that in an appeal to the…
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas (1954), was a landmark case, impacting the public school system with making segregation within the school system a violation against the law. It showed how separate but equal no longer make sense in America. Leading up to the groundbreaking court case, the country was divided by segregation. In the south, there were Jim Crow Laws and the white population trying to limit the power the African-American had within the community. While in the north there…
states (Arizona, Kansas, New Mexico and Wyoming) allowed for creation of racially segregated schools. According to the Supreme Court's ruling in the Plessy v Ferguson case of 1896, public school could be segregated as long as they were "separate but equal", meaning that they were granted the same facilities, opportunities and resources.…
Education is considered a landmark Supreme Court case due to the fact that it showed the need for racial equality in the United States, and completely changed the legal notion of “separate but equal”. This case was about racial based segregation with children in public schools, because the “separate but equal” rule was violating the…
The second rhetorical strategy I will be talking about in this paragraph is that of Sentence Structure. Sentence Structure is the plainly, the order of your word in the sentence. The order that you select will have an impact on what is emphasized and what is minimized. Not only does the structure matter, but the length of the sentence can also have an effect on what is emphasized as well. Generally the longer the sentence, the greater the chance to bury a detail that you do not wish to highlight…
I remembered the fear and worry in my grandmother’s eyes the night before when my grandfather had been admitted to a hospice when he had been suffering from an unusual fever that never subsided, prompting us to call an ambulance. I had never been in this situation before and my anxiety had heightened more than ever. The paramedics clamored over my grandfather, scolding my grandmother for having not called for help sooner, “If you knew that he was in this condition then why did you not call for…
violating the commerce clause. Now, the United States Government is trying to tell my state of Montana, among others, that we cannot create our own firearms laws and that we must follow the federal government’s. The weapons were made and sold within the state of Montana, so we should have say about what laws are placed upon these firearms. To regulate our products made in the great state of Montana, the federal government is undermining the meaning of the commerce clause. The clause has to do…
Tone: the attitude toward the subject and audience that is implied in literature. Example: In “Shooting an Elephant”, George Orwell states “The wretched prisoners huddling in the stinking cages of the lock-ups, the grey, cowed faces of the long-term convicts, the scarred buttocks of the men of the men who have been flogged with bamboos…” (50 essays Pg.277) Function: The gruesome tone here brings out a dark feeling from the author to the reader. Without this the message would not have come…