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racism | The antebellum Louisiana setting shows how the racial levels of leadership of the time had a psychological impact not simply on the black slaves because of enslavement, abuse by their owners, and compelled work – absolutely stripping them of their humankind – yet furthermore how slavery impacts the psychology of the wh... |
racism | She keeps in touch with her mom to get some information about this allegation that she is black, and she comments that she will die from misery if it is all valid. Her mom doesn’t know Desiree’s real parents, so she sends back a mysterious message. Desiree attempts to move Armand’s heart one final time, however without... |
racism | Racism, in my view, is right off the bat a misinterpretation or the acknowledgment of false information. Most individuals become racist from a family situation where racism is sustained. By sustained, I imply that specific individuals are consistently torn down, and false information is given about this group of people... |
racism | In the story “Desiree’s Baby”, there are a lot of issues that can be talked about more profound, for example, gender issues, slavery, love, and so on. However, the fundamental issue that is unmistakably imagined in this short story is the manner by which somebody’s pride can turn out to be overpowering to the point tha... |
racism | People believe the hype that Canada is a nation of cultural tolerance but that’s totally not true. Racism is prejudice, judgment, or resentment directed against someone of a different race based on the belief that one’s race is superior to the other{s}Racism is also a form of hate. Being racist is a choice; no one is b... |
racism | It’s upon this social foundation that affirmative action must be constructed. Accordingly, confirmatory actions have lean towards to be based on two very different blueprints. One methodology leaves the control structures and institutional policies and norms in place while according preferential access to disproportion... |
racism | The disagreement on whether racism exists in the Canadian criminal justice system or not is based on personal involvement or witness with racism. The vigorous of racism was present at one point in the criminal justice system, this may the case in the behavior of some police officers in the court at sentencing and in es... |
racism | Intellectuals and representatives in Canada have commonly given miniature attention to the affiliation between race and criminal justice. For the past two decades a commission of inquiry on systemic racism in the Ontario criminal justice system found that there were judgments in the criminal justice system that shows t... |
racism | The Canadian community seemed to be aware of this particular issue. Research on Canadian shows that 69 percent of people knew that there was racism in Canada, and nearly half of the responders had heard some people make racist remarks towards some persons. Also, another study that was carried out in Vancouver discovere... |
racism | According to Anthony H Richmond the author of Refugees and Racism in Canada he made a very clear line between racism and refugees based on an individual encounter with the act of racism. People seem to think that Canada has often been seen as a safe haven for immigrants. But we cannot deny that racism exists in Canada.... |
racism | There are some terms that are used that show that systematic and institutional racism identify that perception may occur as an unpremeditated magnitude of particular public policies. During recruitment or hiring in the case of employment or admission into school, this requires insignificant gender, physical, age, educa... |
racism | The stereotype that that is projected towards some groups and outlining of particular crimes and performance configurations, can guide the police and immigration officers to stop and search or in some cases even harass innocent people just because they belong to a certain to a certain ethnicity. It is the task of the h... |
racism | Macro-racism is generally common with military and political leaders when they are pursuing to establish the dominance of territory by dynamism, this is usually a result of what they refer to as state egotism or purity. In some cases, or circumstances, where most life-threatening methods are applied it is could lead to... |
racism | The implication of the last term was not really made known to the census officials and there was misunderstanding and confusion because it was obvious that so many persons were of mixed descent this includes English-French descent, French-Aboriginal decent, and a variety of another mixed ethnicity. During the 1921 cens... |
racism | Freedom is a normal human right but in our author’s case, it wasn’t. In 2001 Alicia keys wrote a song version of Maya Angelou’s caged bird poem. Both were called caged birds and were inspired by Paul Dunbar’s sympathy poem, which was written in 1899. In the three versions, a constrained and imprisoned bird wants to fee... |
racism | For example, Dunbar wrote it because of racism and slavery, since his parents were slaves. On the other hand, Maya Angelou wrote a caged bird because of her bad experience of being raped as a child, in addition to racism and sexism. Because Alicia keys related to these poems she decided to turn it into a song version a... |
racism | Throughout the 2 poems and song, the bird faces similar problems that limit it from feeling free and normal. However, the caged bird poem and song are slightly different from the sympathy poem but similar in many, because they express different feelings and points of view, thus used and presented the themes, symbols, a... |
racism | For example, the first theme of “Sympathy” is all about wishing for freedom and hating on imprisonment. After all, it’s a poem about a “caged bird,” a bird that isn’t free to fly around and eat little worms or build a nest in a tree—which is, you know, what birds are meant to do. But the narrator describes this caged b... |
racism | The second theme that is shared between the sympathy and caged bird’s poem and song is race and the African-American experience. “Sympathy” and “caged bird” are poems and a song about a bird. So what in the wide world of sports does it have to do with race? A lot actually. Dunbar was an important African-American poet ... |
racism | Both Caged birds and sympathy have many similar symbols but meant and used them in different ways throughout the two poems and songs. For example, the key symbol of both poems and songs is the bird. The bird whether caged or not is a traditional symbol of freedom simply by their unique ability to fly. Taking flight is ... |
racism | The second symbol that they all share is the cage. The cage is a powerful metaphor applied specifically to present slavery as the universal symbol of African-American life. Beyond the poem’s specific meaning relating to blackness in America, of course, the cage can represent any situation in which the speaker might fee... |
racism | The last key similarity between the two poems and song are poetic devices. Both poems and the song has the same devices but used them differently. All of them used metaphors, alliteration, and personification. Sympathy used a controlling metaphor device that runs throughout the verses in which the caged bird represents... |
racism | In Sue Monk Kidd’s novel, The Secret Life of Bees, the reader is introduced to the fourteen year old Lily Owens. It’s 1964 in South Carolina when Lily is forced to come to terms with her confused memory of her mother’s death. As Lily travels to Tiburon with Rosaleen (her black housekeeper and nanny) in hopes to find th... |
racism | Racism is very apparent and common during the time period in The Secret Life of Bees. Kidd uses examples of racism in the novel to show how it affects each character differently. In the very first chapter of the novel, the events that take place between Rosaleen and some racist men lead the reader to see how brave and ... |
racism | “Coming alongside the men, Rosaleen lifted her snuff jug, which was filled with black spit, and calmly poured it across the tops of the men’s shoes, moving her hand in little loops like she was writing her name–Rosaleen Daise–just the way she’d practiced” (Kidd 32). This is the first time Lily has truly seen racism and... |
racism | “‘You have to be dumb to pour your snuff juice on those men’s shoes like that. And then dumber not to say you’re sorry if saying it will save your life” (Kidd 54). The author writes this scene to highlight that Lily will never be able to truly understand why Rosaleen did what she did because of the color of her skin an... |
racism | While Kidd describes Lily, not as a stereotypical racist living in South Carolina, she lets the reader know that Lily can be prejudice at times as well as naive. Lily’s assumptions about black people are proven wrong when she says, “…I thought they could smart, but not as smart as me, me being white. Lying on the cot i... |
racism | The irrationality of racism is displayed throughout Sue Kidd’s “The Secret Life of Bees”. Kidd displays all the characters with dignity. She demonstrates the different personalities of whites and blacks during this time. When Rosaleen goes to vote she is harassed for no reason by white men. Lily feels that all blacks a... |
racism | The discrimination and “intensifying racial unrest (Penguin 1), of their time keeps Lily from pursuing her feelings at first. Lily struggles with her own stereotypes and learns to overcome them by “finding healing and hope among friends who don’t judge you…” (Smith 2). Lily believes all African Americans are uneducated... |
racism | You gotta imagine what’s never been.” (Kidd). Lily doesn’t want to discourage him but she like most others has never heard of a black lawyer before. The way she believes is people have roles that are set like black women such as Rosaleen are housekeepers and black men aren’t lawyers. August helps Lily to understand the... |
racism | Lily, like most children during this time is exposed to segregation and racism. Rosaleen goes to vote and three white men harass her. The men tell her she has to be able to write her name, implying she cannot. When Rosaleen stands up to them she is beaten and thrown in jail. During this “time when the world was changin... |
racism | Even after the Civil Rights act African Americans were still not treated equally. On the night of May’s death, a policeman visits August’s home. He tells Lily that she should live with her aunt or another family member. He didn’t think it was right for a white person to live with blacks. Even though he can see how Boat... |
racism | My favorite part about Halloween is wearing costumes! It’s the one day of the year where you can really express yourself and just be happy, or so I thought. This year I decided to wear my awesome Rainbow Dash costume, hoping to spread some kind of message. However, when I walked into class, hardly anyone was wearing a ... |
racism | I was overwhelmed by the many reports I had seen on just that one day! In short, my 2018 Halloween memory ended up becoming a disappointment because of the many disturbing details I had observed throughout the day. Although dressing up for Halloween has been a tradition for many, many years, the true spirit Halloween m... |
racism | Today, costumes aren’t made of animal resources, that’s just ridiculous! The tradition that started out to drive away ghost has changed in which now we drive away the good in people. In fact, many people are wearing costumes that are racist, discriminatory, and inappropriate to today’s new American society. Likewise, L... |
racism | At the same time, the fact that she feels angry because someone else is ignorant or insensitive in no way contravenes two demonstrable facts: One, those past scars and wounds really happened; two, the racism that inflicted them then still produces related scars and wounds of another sort today” (Student Activists Care ... |
racism | It’s easy to think that wearing Halloween costumes helps express or show interest and imagination of people, especially kids, but when one looks at today’s trends, many Americans are wearing sexually inappropriate costumes on Halloween. For instance, “ people generally choose costumes that help to explore a different o... |
racism | Even so, Americans spend thousands of dollars on buying costumes, only helping retailers and businesses earn benefits and profit at the expense of the American people. Darice Britt a writer for South University claims that “Halloween is the second-largest commercial holiday”(Halloween Is Big Business). I agree with Bri... |
racism | The tradition of wearing costumes on Halloween should cease to continue because it fuels for negative emotions, hate, and discrimination, as well as being a holiday for big businesses and companies to make a profit. Instead of wearing costumes, another positive tradition should replace it. On Halloween, we should try t... |
racism | A Lesson Before Dying is a powerful novel written by author Ernest J. Gaines. Which in short this novel shows the reader the racial tensions of the south. Through the story of a young boy named Jefferson who was wrongfully charged with a crime, and now has to pay the price. When it was all just a matter of being in the... |
racism | Although slavery has since been over from this point for around 80 years the tension between whites and blacks was still tearing many small towns apart, and much of the south as they tried vigorously to keep the social standards of separate but equal. All due to the fact that the complexion of one’s skin is a few shade... |
racism | However, the action was not of malice nor desire no it was a decision made from and entirely of fear. Jefferson a 21-year-old man still very young and yet to discover the many lessons’ life has to offer. Jefferson who grew up with a poverty-stricken life as said here “Ain’t never had enough ice cream. Never had more th... |
racism | With this and a general inference of most of the African Americans at the time, this is why we can assume he is forced to take the items he did. When he is given the option to run and have a chance or stay and surely die for a crime he had not committed as he did not have any money to spare and if he was going to try t... |
racism | Like Jefferson, everyone in life is forced to make choices and tough decisions in their life. In which make us the people we are today, I am no different and my choice was similar to Jefferson in the fact that it’s a choice of staying or going in search of something better. And the choice that affected most of me was w... |
racism | However, it also gave me many bonds that will never be broken, but when it came to showing it was something I was “talented” at basically meaning I did not fall off… that often however it got to a point where I was not enjoying it as much as when I first started along with many competitions I had were out of state, and... |
racism | African Americans and many minorities alike lived in a society of constant fear, and although it has gotten a lot better since the times of slavery, sharecropping, and jim crow. When looking into America’s past and seeing these blemishes in the history of what’s supposed to be the land of the free. Throughout America’s... |
racism | Youth is a time meant for self-discovery, a time in which many begin the journey of finding their true identity, and most importantly, a time where we are at our most vulnerable. This time is crucial in shaping who we will become, and at this time we are most susceptible to the hatred and deception that plague today’s ... |
racism | I will not stand by as I watch more and more of my peers fall prey to the divisive, misleading content being disseminated on social media. Our presence on the platform is undeniable, Although the damaging consequences are overshadowed by the overarching benefits it offers. The exposure of detrimental content such as ra... |
racism | From the mere rants in the comment section of a post or news article to reframing the meaning of news stories to support their views, social media is a hate group most beneficial tool and our youth are the target. The algorithms implemented in the world’s most widespread social media apps allow for these sites to becom... |
racism | YouTube is fitted with an algorithm designed to push people towards extremist content for engagement, in doing this, the platform drives users towards videos promoting extremist views and conspiracy theories, which prompt them to consume more information to the point where they begin to believe it. 94 percent of Austra... |
racism | Social media is built on the purpose of the interaction, which in itself is validation that it is a breeding ground for detrimental ideologies. No matter the time or day, your daily scroll through social media is filled with posts of people expressing their opinions. However, the exploitation of this aspect by far-righ... |
racism | Racial injustice has been an issue over the past decades. So, when choosing books to read, I focus on pieces that address these issues. For instance, I particularly enjoyed The Hate U Give a fiction novel portraying the racial and systematic injustices African Americans face in America today. The main character of the ... |
racism | After witnessing this incident, she now feels pressure from all sides of the community because his death became a means to protest racial injustice throughout the community. Starr felt like she had to lead the protest being that she was the witness and she was not prepared to. Starr must overcome her fears and stand up... |
racism | She attends Williamson Prep, which is a primarily white private school, but she lives in Garden Heights a mostly poor, African American neighborhood. Throughout the novel Starr states having to be “preppy Starr” at school and that she felt as though she could never be her true self around the people she went to school ... |
racism | The second strongest aspect of this novel is that it conveys a perspective of how systematic racism is exemplified within America. Portraying the events through Starr’s eyes, this book displays how the media presents young black men as guilty until proven innocent. Starr chooses to confront a system that she knows is w... |
racism | Although, The Hate U Give is a noteworthy novel because it presents a relatable main character and a realistic situation. Melina Abdullah and Patrisse Khan-Cullors may object that the book is motivated by the Black Lives Matter movement. The Los Angeles Sentinel states that the book “makes black people responsible for ... |
racism | The Hate U Give is a valuable narrative because it depicts a relatable young African American female main character who powerfully conquers obstacles and expresses a perspective of how systematic racism is portrayed within America. I uphold that the book shares with all races, ages and genders the types of struggles Af... |
racism | The Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka in 1954 revisited the “separate but equal” doctrine. The court first ruled in 1896 in the Plessy v. Ferguson case that racially segregated facilities were legal. The Brown case was a major turning point during the civil rights movement. The court ruled unanim... |
racism | The White Citizens’ Councils were formed to pressure political leaders to oppose court-ordered integration. In 1956, 96 of the 128 southern senators and representatives signed the Southern Manifesto criticizing the Supreme Courts’ decision. In the summer of 1957, the Little Rock school board worked to implement its man... |
racism | Faubus called on the National Guard to prevent the first African American students from attending Central High School. After three weeks, a federal judge ordered the National guard off the school grounds. People were outraged and there was a white mob outside the school. In the end, President Eisenhower dispatched unit... |
racism | He also talked about the importance of the military-industrial complex and how there should be checks on it to prevent it from becoming all-powerful and out of control. He stated the importance of conserving our resources and protecting out government we can continue to prosper with freedom and in peace. I enjoyed all ... |
racism | The ones that stood out to me the most were “Brown V. Board of Educations of Topeka”, “Southern Declaration on Integration”, and “The Situation in Little Rock.” It was interesting to learn about the Supreme Court case of Brown V. Board of Education. This was an important case and set major precedence for the future of ... |
racism | “The Situation in Little Rock” also showed the effects the court’s decision had on the south. There was major opposition to the racial integration of schools. It was so great that President Eisenhower dispatched the 101st Airborne Division to diffuse the mobs, restore peace, and to protect the black students. It is fas... |
racism | Racial equality could depend upon government action, however, racial equality begins with the individuals. Throughout history, the American Government has done numerous thing, like creating laws to get rid of minorities. The American people are the ones that started the racial equality in the United States of America. ... |
racism | Even though the people got to stand up to end slavery and slavery became banned , it ultimately caused segregation by the government. The cycle then continued similar to slavery to end segregation. Government action has also influence inequality towards other minorities such as the Chinese immigrants during the late 18... |
racism | The Civil Rights Act in 1875 was enacted during the Reconstruction Era in order to protect United States citizens, particularly African Americans, in their civil and legal rights. The act was first introduced in 1870 by Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, one of the greatest advocates for black civil rights in Con... |
racism | The act was meant to guarantee equal treatment and outlawed racial discrimination by public facilities such as hotels, juries, theaters, schools, railroads, and other public accommodations. In 1883, the Supreme Court argued that the Constitution’s Fourteenth Amendment only prohibits unequal treatment by state authoriti... |
racism | The United States government not only displayed racial inequality towards African Americans but also against Chinese immigrants in the 1850s.A sense of an anti Chinese sentiment grew strong, especially on the West Coast, as native born Americans became more unemployed with declining wages and Chinese labor increased. A... |
racism | Throughout the United States history, people create great strides towards racial equality by addressing their opinions to the government through their actions. Those who stood up and were against the forces of racial inequality and prejudice played a major role in modifying the American outlook of race and ethnicity. W... |
racism | Injustice has manifested throughout the centuries for as long as society has known. From discrimination, to segregation civilians have been taught to neglect or judge people based on the content of there skin, sex, or age. With leaders like Martin Luther King Jr., who has taken it upon himself to speak out on an unreas... |
racism | Dr. King includes in his letter that an affiliate asks the conference to engage in a “nonviolent” direct action program in Birmingham. Birmingham was known to be a place that stored a lot of segregated behavior. It was only appropriate to create a positive movement to change the system little by little, which was Dr. K... |
racism | Dr. King States “But when you have seen vicious mobs lynch your mothers and fathers at will and drown your brother and sisters at whim; when you have to concoct an answer for a five year old son who is asking: “Daddy, why do white people treat colored people so mean?” (383) which was a use of parallelism. |
racism | It reached into the reader’s mind to help them better understand the never-ending hardships African Americans had to endure on a daily basis.. He also includes metaphors such as when he says he sees “twenty million negro brothers smothering in an airtight cage of proverty in the midst of an affluent society.” (383) Thi... |
racism | By grasping the audience’s attention Dr. King uses brutality, violence, and, despotism. This use of pathos lets the reader understand the issues black people had to face to make the reader understand the injustice they had to suffer for, over a peaceful protest. Dr. King also makes his point across by stating that “inj... |
racism | To make everyone including the clergyman believe his contretemps he had to use reasons and facts to assure. Dr. King uses logos by stating facts about the bombing of negro homes and churches in Birmingham and how it is the city with the most unsolved state of affairs in the nation. This provides a type of integrity and... |
racism | He was able to show the American people the injustices the black community faced, as well as the nonviolent protests that were critical to the movement, and the changes that brought equality and peace to America. If these rhetorical devices were not used, his audience would not be able to truly comprehend the argument ... |
racism | The Reconstruction Era was a heavily debated topic amongst many historians. After the civil war, not only was the South devastated, but there were thousands of now free slaves that needed to be integrated into society. At the beginning of Andrew Johnson’s presidency, he was somewhat fair with his plans for reconstructi... |
racism | Contradicting the Dunning school’s view, historian Eric Foner categorized the reconstruction era as a success but an “unfinished revolution.” Deepening Foner’s thoughts, Du Bois, in the Black Reconstruction of America argues that “the corruption was overstressed and that Dunning overlooked many achievements of Reconstr... |
racism | These historians have a strong view of how the Reconstruction Era was a failure. Dunning’s portrayal of the south during this era was “hostile.” He supported the idea that the south was ruined by reconstruction. Dunning argued that freedmen proved incapable of self-government, therefore, making segregation necessary. D... |
racism | According to Dunning’s portrayal, blacks were depicted to be unequipped of meaningful political participation, while terrorist organizations, like the Ku Klux Klan, were almost rewarded for the efforts to “restore” the south’s natural order. To further prove his points, Dunning shows that the failure of reconstruction ... |
racism | According to Foner, the Dunnings interpretation of Reconstruction was a part of the belief of the Jim Crow Laws, which was an explanation and justification for taking the 15th amendment away from the black men during the reconstruction. Almost like it was a justification for the white South resisting efforts to change ... |
racism | Dunning’s interpretation of reconstruction differs from Foner’s interpretation by the Dunning school believing reconstruction was always going to fail and felt that taking the right to vote or hold office away from the whites in the south was a violation of republicanism. Dunning also differs from “The South’s traditio... |
racism | Even though there were many plus sides to the civil war, for example, the abolishment of slavery, secession was refuted, and the supremacy of national government. There was still one downside which was the Reconstruction of the country. The main issue was how they were going to figure out what to do with all the freed ... |
racism | There were many more reasons why reconstruction was a failure but these were the most impactful. Like all things in life, reconstruction had to come to an end, the resulting outcome was both a success and a failure. The Ku Klux Klan was a group of white males that would rally their views and opinions about African Amer... |
racism | In Document 2 General Thomas discusses the KKK. Their main purpose was to get rid of African Americans so that the whites could gain more power. They even killed any who supported the African Americans, even if they were white. “With the close of the last and the beginning of the new year the State of Tennessee was dis... |
racism | They were creating obstacles for the government while they were trying to take care of the freedmen. Another way the KKK was an impactful part of the failure of Reconstruction was shown in an editorial in Atlanta Newspaper when the editor of the section tries to get white males to help out in getting rid of the African... |
racism | We have submitted long enough to indignities, and it is time to meet brute-force with brute-force.” In the document, the speaker states his views on the African Americans in the south. He wants the Northerners to go to the South and Organize a way to convince freedmen to stop voting. Also, they tried to stop them from ... |
racism | Since they’re a different complexion since they were born and raised different they’re considered to be not equal. The splotchy political rights of African American was shown in document 6. In the document, Dr. W. E. B. DuBois tells us about how the African Americans who wanted to work weren’t allowed to do anything in... |
racism | The last most major reason why reconstruction was a failure was the election that ended reconstruction. In document 8, we’re given a map that has the statistics of the election. In the key clearly shows that Samuel J Tilden won in both the popular vote and the Uncontested Electoral Vote. So it wasn’t possible for Hayes... |
racism | Another way this election assisted the failure of the reconstruction was because it brought reconstruction to an end altogether. Since the freedmen were open to all injustice, the efforts by the Northern Republicans in Congress to protect freedmen and their rights were abandoned. There was nothing left to be done. The ... |
racism | A lot of people like poetry while others despise it. Is it because it’s a list of words and sentences so, they don’t bother to read it because they might not like to read? Although some people might hate poetry others love it for its the use of a form of speech to cover an ongoing issue. It is used to talk to other peo... |
racism | Hughes knew the right words to put in his poem and it meant a lot to others especially from the 1920s to the 1960s. In order to deal with ongoing issues in the world, poetry is a key component to get to people’s hearts and inform them what’s going on with this world. Langston Hughes was born into a time in American His... |
racism | He used poetry to speak to the people. Langston Hughes is a pioneer of African American literature and the Harlem Renaissance era (Sundquist para. 1). There aren’t many pictures of Langston Hughes but, there is a photo of him in what seems to be an office some sort (e.g. see fig. 1). |
racism | During the rise of the Civil Rights struggle, his publications in the 1950s and 1960s spoke on the political upheaval and the conditions of African American Life. This affected the dreams African Americans had for equality. The only thing people had was their dreams, which lead Langston Hughes to write his poems on dre... |
racism | Hughes dedicated his poems to the struggles, pride, dreams, and racial injustices of African American people. Rampersad states that when Hughes first began to write, he “committed himself both to writing and to writing mainly about African-Americans” (Rampersad para. 1). Certainly, his choice in the study and writing m... |
racism | Many people strive to one day have these ideas become our reality. But what happens to us when those very dreams fail to take form when one’s desires and plans for achievement are halted before they reach fulfillment. When they experience temporary or even permanent deferment? When one loses our hope in their dreams it... |
racism | Hughes became interested in socialism. Hughes supported the Soviet’s ideologies of communism as there were no flaws of equality. The communistic economies presented struggle and poverty, but Hughes still believed in it since there was no racism or classes in society. Hughes took part in the communist party in the US, a... |
racism | In conclusion, in order to deal with cultural problems going on in the world, poetry is a key component to get to people’s hearts and inform them what’s going on with this world. Hughes brings a major change in the eyes of Americans, through his influential and powerful poetry. He witnesses the social injustice faced b... |
racism | This paper deals with the issue of violence, particularly in relations to youth, today. Violence is all prevalent today, and although violence can be politicized or carried out with subtlety, one must recognize the fact that violence has become a part and parcel of all our lives today, and unless one takes notice of th... |
racism | Everyday, everywhere, there is violence being perpetrated against a lesser member of the society, and although it is true that violence may be predominantly physical, that is, in the act of physical violence of one human being against another, violence can also be a part of society in various other ways, like for examp... |
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