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racism | Personally, I really enjoyed this book, but that’s because I’m not easily affected when it comes to talk of drugs and alcohol. A lot of people I know am and they wouldn’t want to read this book if they knew how much drug and alcohol talk there is. This story does mention drugs and alcohol in the beginning of the book, ... |
racism | This book has quite a lot of violence as well. From Jared’s mother stapling her boyfriends arms to the ground when they threaten Jared to Jared’s friends explaining to him in detail what they would do to him if they didn’t bring them pot cookies. This part of the story kind of irked me. I can’t stand violence so it rea... |
racism | That part was very sad to me. I’m a huge animal lover, and even though the story is fiction, it was still very depressing to hear that somebody would run over a dog. I am a little bit of a sensitive person when it comes to violence. Every time I see a fight, even if it’s on television, my anxiety levels shoot up. I wan... |
racism | Whenever I opened this book to pick up where I left off, I had to mentally prepare myself for all of the explicits I was about to read. On almost every page of this novel, there is at least one explicit. I’d say 90% of the time, they are f-bombs or racial slurs. To me, swear words don’t so much affect me, they just som... |
racism | I find that they are very self-absorbed and just don’t care about what others say about them, which is usually a good thing, but not when it comes to using racial slurs. I’d say most of the people I know is offended when people use coarse language, especially racial slurs, to them or even around them. The fact that the... |
racism | I’ve seen a TV series that is similar to this novel. It’s called Shameless. It’s definitely not a TV show that people under 18 should watch, but I’ve heard a lot about it and decided to watch one episode. I absolutely regret watching it. It’s all about sex, drugs, and alcohol. The way that people described it made it s... |
racism | I don’t mind watching sex scenes as long as I don’t see anything that’s extreme, although it is a bit awkward. But these sex scenes were full on nudity and I felt very uncomfortable watching it. I think anybody would. The reason I made this movie connection to the book is because there is quite a lot of talk about drug... |
racism | Not being able to shield yourself in opposition to the harm that human beings can put another person through, can cause deeply rooted mental and physical scarring that will impact you for life. We need to see the reality of what the world is doing to each other, and as an alternative of turning to violence whether it b... |
racism | Attitude, opinions, and the way we treat every other living thing is mostly centred on our own beliefs. Most people believe that if our thoughts are prejudiced, then our attitude and behavior will result as the same. Racism is a belief based on non-factual generalizations. Stereotyping, as the same as racism, also cons... |
racism | During the early 20th Century, both Zora Neale Hurston and Audre Lorde write about their experiences as strong African-American young women facing extensive racial discrimination, recounting similar but very different stories in their essays. These accounts are diverse in the management of their plight but typical for ... |
racism | When she was there, she describes moments when she sang, danced and greeted neighbors in the streets and observed her community from a comfortable and safe spot on her front porch. At that time, she was “everybody’s Zora,” without the feeling of alienation or difference. She “felt her race” when she was thirteen after ... |
racism | Lorde was born and raised in New York City to Caribbean immigrant parents where she realized that she was “different” when she traveled to Washington DC after her eighth-grade graduation (the trip was a present to both her and her sister, Phyllis, who graduated high school at the same time). Similarly, Lorde describes ... |
racism | While her family was trying to get a little something to cool off at Breyer’s (ice cream and soda fountain), her white waitress at the white counter refused to serve her white ice cream to escape the white heat on the white pavement, where she wasn’t able to appreciate the white stone monuments offered by the city. She... |
racism | These women have different points of view, however. Zora Neale Hurston explores the discovery of her identity and self-pride through the extended metaphors she writes and does not consider herself “tragically colored”. She says that African-Americans have had to minimize their racial identities to force others to treat... |
racism | Alternatively, the inherited superiority of white people has scarred Audre Lorde, and she understands that she is not equal – according to her essay. She struggles with her classification and identity, separating American citizens into different categories. Since racism is very prevalent, her newfound adulthood coincid... |
racism | Hurston makes sense of her experience by running towards rather than away from her African-American identity. She uses a metaphor for people as different colored bags, all of which are filled with the random contents that make up life. If you were to dump out the pieces and then refill the bags, none would differ great... |
racism | The change between childhood and adulthood is quickly felt for Lorde as her family is denied service at that ice cream parlor in Washington DC. Without protest, they quietly get down from their stools, outraged, as if they “had never been black before”. Her parents felt they could have avoided the situation had they an... |
racism | Societies develop social standards, stereotypes, or labels to categorize people in, whether that is due to race, gender, social status, etc. These classifications can create injustices like racism and sexism, especially for immigrants. Discussing problems from a removed perspective can be challenging, but it is crucial... |
racism | Identity is a key theme in the novel, and an example which shows this, is when Ifemelu cuts her hair for a job interview. The significance of identity in connection to themes of race, class, and gender are exemplified through the blogs which Ifemelu writes throughout the course of the novel. |
racism | Yet a part of her always stiffened with apprehension, expecting the person on the other end to realize that she was play-acting this professional, this negotiator of terms, to see that she was, in fact, an unemployed person who wore a rumpled nightshirt all day, to call her ‘Freud!’ and hang up (Adichie, 306). |
racism | Adichie is addressing the challenge of belonging and identity through the lens of Ifemelu’s African perspective. The American girl triumphs the Nigerian girl in a workplace setting. Ifemelu struggles to figure out how she should look to appeal to the customers at her workplace. Beauty is oppressive, as she goes outside... |
racism | Ifemelu also struggles with gender inequality, which is a continuous struggle throughout the novel. Gender is racialized, since Ifemelu knows that she would never act this way in Nigeria, but in America, she has no better instinct. Adichie shows how depending on which country you are in, the cultural norms vary and thu... |
racism | In the contemporary era, women in the business world have to work harder than men to maintain a certain image. The present-day job market is notorious for placing an emphasis on beauty. There is a certain image Ifemelu is trying to match. It is noteworthy that although Ifemelu is portrayed as someone who has a lot of s... |
racism | Labour is racialized because Ifemelu is conscious of the fact that she is cannot maintain a fake American identity. One can argue that the reason she decides to act like an American is because she is desperate for income, which makes her lose self-respect. From a broader perspective, women all over the world may choose... |
racism | Adichie would agree that the expectations of certain jobs make women feel pressured to look a certain way. It highlights the idea that the American beliefs about beauty are superior to Nigerian ideals. She would also say that Ifemelu does not have a lot of social capital, since she felt really uncomfortable acting as i... |
racism | One of the problems that was addressed early and continued to be addressed throughout the novel, was Ifemelu’s finding of her self-identity. Ifemelu was concerned with the generalization of self-identity by the host society. This could be seen in both American and Nigerian society. For example, early on in the novel wh... |
racism | This same problem could also be seen in Nigeria. Although these two societies hold differences, they both set expectations and generalize how people should act and be. Ifemelu recognized this social Nigerian standard in her Aunty Uju’s relationship with The General. Uju, like many other Nigerian women, was interested i... |
racism | He gave her everything she wanted, including a big house, money, jewelry, and whatever else she asked for. In Nigeria, it is expected that the rich remain in power. The General lived up to this expectation by making Uju ask him for everything she needed. This put her in a submissive position and gave the General contro... |
racism | This shows how perceptions can dictate the way people act, according to their respective societies. There are certain expectations put in place by that society which extends its bias into its people. Real conversations can be made much more difficult if these expectations are not addressed, and in many cases overlooked... |
racism | When the United States elected a black man as president, every individual was talking about a post-racial America, a period that would see a change in the racial boundaries set in the United States. The country felt good about having Barrack Obama as president and went ahead and re-elected him for another four years te... |
racism | There are a few who believe that during the same time as Obama’s presidency, racism had built and taken a different turn in a manner that would surprise. The paper aims at explaining how racism has evolved and become systematic in American society today. The paper will further analyze the contradicting ideas of others ... |
racism | For many white Americans, millions of black and Latino children attending segregated schools may seem like a throwback to another era, a problem we solved long ago. Assigning black students to white schools and vice versa was necessary to destroy a system built on racism even if white families didn’t like it. |
racism | In the article, Nikole recounts the dilemma she had to go through while selecting a school for their daughter. Living in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, a community regarded to be of low-income and mostly inhabited by blacks, where schools primarily reflect New York’s racial and economic disparities. Most of the students... |
racism | There is, however, a section of individuals who believe in the absence of discrimination of people due to their race. Jesse, in his excerpt, tries to differentiate segregation and racism and further asks if blacks were up for integration. “Racism does not exist” is what Jesse told Fox News anchor Tucker Carlson in one ... |
racism | “Racism” is supposedly the belief one race is superior to another. But those who accuse whites of racism or white supremacy feel morally superior to those whites. You can’t force someone to love you. All people discriminate, and you should be free to do so. Blacks were doing quite well in separate schools and businesse... |
racism | The black community, according to Jesse were fairing on in the separate businesses and schools, and it was the influence of leaders who called for integration that brought the problem by shutting black schools and crowding schools of children from the white race with African American students. Blacks were respected and... |
racism | The Psychological and social impact of race is one of the issues mostly ignored though have significance on the life of different individuals. Continually targeting particular competition together with fabrication of data that the said races have an impact, especially if the business gets passed through various cohorts... |
racism | For many white people, the idea that we have racial identities is difficult to come to terms with. We usually see ourselves simply as people. Whiteness, by its status as the dominant social position, is unmarked. It is relatively easy for white persons to go through life never thinking about their own racial identity. ... |
racism | Such a norm not only identifies the African Americans differently but also regards them as deficient within society. Recent studies have indicated that there is a decline in racial bigotry majority of white Americans still identify white for positive and blacks to be negative. Evidence suggests that implicit racial bia... |
racism | What boggles the mind of many psychologist researchers is if the race is a concept that can get verified scientifically. Are humans racist by nature, or there are codes within our DNA that express racism in humans? Most biologist acknowledges that race results through an evolutionary lineage which comes with difference... |
racism | Differences indeed exist among humans, but they are not racial. Skin color, the most common visual cue that most of us use as a determinant of race, does not reflect the extreme genetic difference, nor does it reflect a distinct evolutionary history. Diversity of skin color merely indicates the geographical adaptation ... |
racism | The 2003 documentary Race: The Power of Illusion indicated an exciting finding. Multiethnic students met with a genetics expert. The students compared their skin colors and submitted blood samples for DNA analysis. The experiment aimed to check which classmates shared similar genetic information. While it would have to... |
racism | I never chose to be an African! I have never even contemplated the question of why I am an African. But here I am, a born and bred African for all my thirty years of life, and I couldn’t be more proud to stand up and say that I am proudly an African. |
racism | Africa, the land of hope, enriched with a past filled with plenty of sadness and pain, but above all, filled with so much beauty and diversity. The vast resources this continent holds, from the diamonds to the gold and even more the incredible people that we know as Africans that are born and bred here that contribute ... |
racism | The ones who speak the local languages, the ones whose hearts pump for Africa. Being African is more than skin deep, it has nothing to do with color or creed. The colour of our skin does not determine what makes us African because we as human beings are sharing experience in this body in this world. |
racism | The past may never be wiped away from all the pain and suffering that occurred. As Thabo Mbeki said: “in its remembering, should teach us not and never to be inhuman again.” If we could use our history to help us understand that dividing a nation as unique and as diverse as ours will never propel us forward. |
racism | said about Ubuntu; “We are all connected. What unites us is our common humanity. I don’t want to oversimplify things – but the suffering of a mother who has lost her child is not dependent on her nationality, ethnicity, or religion. White, black, rich, poor, Christian, Muslim, or Jew – pain is pain – joy is joy. In Sou... |
racism | Xenophobia is based on racism on an entire nationality. Ubuntu as a practice should be used in reference to the xenophobia we have in Africa. The foreigners that have come to this country came for a better life and a chance to make a living. Unfortunately, in all cultures and races, we have the few that can cause a bad... |
racism | “South Africa is Africa’s most industrialized country, and it attracts thousands of foreign nationals every year, seeking refuge from poverty, economic crises, war and government persecution in their home countries. While the majority of them are from elsewhere on the continent, such as Zimbabwe, Malawi, Democratic Rep... |
racism | We as Africans should all stick together because we as Africans are our sports teams, we are the “braais” and vuvuzelas, we are the wildebeest migrating through the Serengeti, we are the Masai tribal warriors, we are the Nile and the Zambezi. We as Africans are “born of a people who are heroes and heroines.” 3 |
racism | A “Nelson Mandela” is in each and every one of us, if we only took the time as he did to realize that no one is better than the other, underneath it all we are all one. We were born Africans and we will die Africans, no amount of hatred, stereotyping, or generalizations can take that away from us. We may all be from di... |
racism | As Thabo Mbeki said, “It is a firm assertion made by ourselves that South Africa belongs to all who live in it, Black and White.” “I owe my being to the hills and the valleys, the mountains and the glades, the rivers, the deserts, the trees, the flowers, the seas, and the ever-changing seasons that define the face of o... |
racism | My identity has been impacted in many ways, some do not think white people are African, but how can I not be when African is all I know. To me, I am more African than some. As a child in 1994 starting grade 1, with a classroom filled with multi-racial students was clearly a pivotal point in South Africa, little did I k... |
racism | Hello. My name is Temi Dairo. I am a black teenage boy living in a white man’s country, and I am proud to say that I stand firm against racism in society; especially in sport. I believe we should all stand. Together. To make a change in the way different ethnicities and nationalities are viewed in sport. |
racism | Sterling received the ‘Integrity and impact’ award for his stand against all kinds of discrimination in football. This man is an inspiration to ethnic minorities due to his strive regardless of the struggles and challenges along his path to glory. From my little experience playing football as a young boy, I have come a... |
racism | Racism is not just a problem in Premier League grounds, it exists in every level of English football, from youth team’s right up to the national side; and we should make the effort to stop this atrocity! Racism can have devastating effect on young future players as it can lower ego, self-esteem, and confidence. Why sho... |
racism | This paper will answer the research question, what is the relationship between racism and bullying and the education of Hispanic young adults between the ages of 15 and 19. Racism, according to Schmid, (2008) is defined as the lack of equality based on a person’s race only. Bullying is repeated unwanted acts over a min... |
racism | It is also reported that constant bullying discourages teens from continuing receiving an education. Nora & Cabrera, (1996) found that Hispanics reported the lowest college enrollment rates as well as the highest dropout rates. The following paper will explore the social problem of racism and how it can be explained by... |
racism | Research has shown the correlation between racism and protective adaptation. Protective adaptation is animal or humans evolved way of being protected from danger by changing their body. Although this mechanism is most common in animals such as frogs, humans throughout the years evolved similarly. The brain plays a pivo... |
racism | Sensors and hormones are released, and over time since if these protective mechanisms are released often it becomes a natural part of a person’s thought process. This gives reason as to why a Hispanic teen would be discouraged to achieve a higher education because of the racism they endured. Another study by McEwens & ... |
racism | When reading research conducted by Rygren, (2003), xenophobia is common in most people that are considered to be racist. Xenophobia is the fear of living or coexisting with people of different countries or cultures. People with this fear believe it is natural to act in a hostile way towards countries or cultures. A per... |
racism | Natural supplements that can adjust the brain’s functioning can be effective in improving this social problem. Studies by Gad, Bateman, & Holtzheimer, (2017) have found that 5-Hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) can be used to reduce the levels of hormones released from the brain that cause an individual to feel overwhelmed by c... |
racism | Another intervention that can be effective in improving this social problem is psychotherapy. As defined by Horvath, Re, Fl?ckiger, & Symonds, (2011), psychotherapy is treatment in which a therapist and patient work together to improve mental conditions by focusing on their therapeutic relationship. By focusing on the ... |
racism | In my opinion psychotherapy would be the best intervention for racism and bullying affecting education because it is a one on one approach with a professional that is tailored to help the individual. Being that we are all individuals and no two people are exactly the same, I find it best to use an approach that is tail... |
racism | I quickly turned around and asked my husband why he would choose such a movie to watch. He looked at me and said it was a highly acclaimed comedy and that it would get better if we gave it some time. I decided to sit down and be open minded and give it a chance. I looked up a few reviews on my phone to see what others ... |
racism | As the movie progressed, I saw a different side to the movie and I realized the direction that Mel Brooks was pointing the audience to. He was satirizing Hollywood’s classic western films, as well as the role of African Americans portrayed in these films in comparison to their actual treatment in the historical ‘wild w... |
racism | Yet it never seems to be acts of crimes happening, but a tactic to stop someone because of the color of their skin. This is a form of legalized prejudice and it begins to cause a mistrust for african american people when it comes to looking for help from police. |
racism | African Americans aren’t seen as individuals, but as thugs/criminals because of the color of their skin and that makes them a target. In the article of ‘Police Don’t Like Black People’ a black youth describe his encounter he have had with police. Travis explained how an undercover officer who incorrectly believed he wa... |
racism | They the police that be riding them regular cars and look like regular people. They like “what you doing on this corner?” And I’m just steady talking to ’em and they thought I had some dope in my mouth. So this one cop grabbed me and just started squeezing my throat. I was coughing and spitting up stuff and I’m like “w... |
racism | Racial favouritism still exists in South Africa. Racism takes a lot of mental and emotional well-being of everyone and no one is taking into account the perpetrators and its results. Racial inequality has always been a problem in South Africa, which has been affecting the growth of the nation. The Apartheid Era has lef... |
racism | The writer agrees that racial inequality is affecting the growth of South Africa because after the Apartheid Era, even though those Apartheid laws no longer exist, non-white people are still being unfairly treated because of race and not due to the abilities or talents that people possess. This argument will feature by... |
racism | An example of this would be the Oscar Pistorius’ murder trial. According to the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (2013), when a person has committed murder in South Africa, the minimum sentencing should be 25 years. However, Oscar Pistorius is jailed for 6 years. Sandile Mantsoe, the man who murdered his girlfrie... |
racism | Service delivery is distributed differently in South Africa due to racial discrimination. CITATION Sou09 l 7177 (South African Government, 2009) says “Allegations of racism affected service delivery in some of Mpumalanga police stations affected service delivery.” For example, South African Police Services (SAPS) respo... |
racism | The job selection process in business are affected by racial preference. There are many skilled, non-black graduates that are unemployed due to racial bias. . An example would be a white and a black graduate applies for an agricultural job. Both candidates are not experienced, but they have the same qualifications and ... |
racism | Educational backgrounds might be similar or qualifications might be the same, but racial bias affects the distribution of wealth. “The purpose of the Employment Equity Act, No 55 of 1998 is to achieve equity in the workplace by promoting equal opportunity and fair treatment in employment through elimination of unfair d... |
racism | South Africa is not growing as an economy. The author argued that racial inequality is hindering South Africa’s growth. The author elaborated with the argument by substantiating how the various types of systems is affected by racial discrimination and how it is contributing to the problems South Africa is currently fac... |
racism | As a part of daily life, we as human beings are faced with many situations. As soon as we are confronted with something, the frontal lobe of our brain makes an immediate judgment based on prior knowledge. Whether these judgments are “true” or “false,” our brain obtains this prior knowledge because of past experiences, ... |
racism | Racism and prejudice are demeaning assumptions and judgments made by people against other people that is rampant in the Western World. The film Crash, directed by Paul Haggis, literally and figuratively tells a story of a “crash” between ethnic groups, socio-economic classes, and even occupations in the city of Los Ang... |
racism | Throughout this ultimately counter-hegemonic film, many dominant ideologies about race, ethnicity, and class are both reinforced and deconstructed. Haggis successfully presents a counter-narrative to dominant ideologies with his use of the film’s title, editing, symbolism, and characters. These rhetorical choices with ... |
racism | According to Merriam Webster Dictionary, the word “crash” means an “an accidental or intentional occurrence or a violent collision.” This metaphor of the word crash is constantly seen throughout the film. At first, viewers begin to think that these “racial collisions” had only occurred by accident. However, this consci... |
racism | For example, in the opening scene of the movie the metaphor of the word “crash” is illustrated when a literal car crash has just occurred. Following this collision, a confrontation between the drivers of the two cars develops. An argument between an Asian woman and a Hispanic woman arises; in which many racial slurs an... |
racism | Another way that Haggis is able to reinforce this metaphorical meaning of a “racist crash,” is by the use of editing. The editor of the film Crash, Hughes Winborne, had a challenge to “intertwine the lives of·unrelated character[s] from ethnic, cultural and social backgrounds over a thirty-six hour period” (Peters 2). ... |
racism | For example, in the intense scene between Cameron Thayer and the two carjackers, Anthony and Peter; fast editing is used in order to thrill audience members. As carjackers in this scene attempt to steal Thayer’s car, audience members are mixed with two types of shots. First, a few subjective shots are seen from the per... |
racism | Furthermore, the editing not only reinforces the metaphor to the films title, but also it reinforces the counter narrative. Because Crash does not follow a “classical Hollywood narrative,” with one or maybe two plot lines. As viewers watch, they begin to discover that there is more than just one perspective from a “whi... |
racism | In order for a counter narrative to be established, Haggis also uses literary design to communicate the counter-hegemonic message. The characters of the film are one of these central elements used by Haggis. Considering that many dominant ideologies of race and ethnicity are present throughout the film, many stereotype... |
racism | In this scene, Haggis demonstrates a white female’s racist behavior, by having Jean clutch her husband for security. However, Haggis goes onto suggest that her behavior was legitimate, when the African Americans actually do steal her car. Some might argue that in this scene Haggis does not establish a counter-narrative... |
racism | Another prominent racial collision amongst characters of different ethnic groups is between Officer Ryan and Cameron and Christine Thayer. In this scene Officer Ryan, the character played by Matt Dillon, sexually assaults Thandie Newton right in front of her husband. As viewers watch, they are overwhelmed with emotions... |
racism | Even though this scene reinforced many dominant ideologies, as the film progresses and character storylines unfold, Haggis is able to slowly deconstructs those ideologies previously reinforced and establishes a counter-narrative. For example, previously in the film it has been established that the white males have powe... |
racism | Furthermore, Haggis is able to establish the counter-narrative that not all stereotypes are true, when Officer Hanson accidently kills a hitchhiker. Unlike the other scenes throughout the movie, this racial collision between the Officer and the hitchhiker does not occur by chance. However, this collision was intentiona... |
racism | “Grouping people according to their race, ethnicity, or nationality overlooks or undervalues the similarities and commonalties that exist between all human begins” (Griffin 48) In the film, Crash, racism and prejudice is not only addressed but questioned. Throughout the film many ethnic groups literally and figurativel... |
racism | Throughout the book, Jesus Behaving Badly by means of Mark Strauss, he goes through a lot of characteristics the place it appears like Jesus should be criminalized and despised as a substitute be anybody that is appeared up to and worshiped. He argues that Jesus was once judgmental, provocative, aggressive, racist, ant... |
racism | What I located Strauss announcing is a bunch of remarks to why Jesus is now not the man we view him as. Quite frankly, I located what he was announcing to be sort of an eye opener but at the identical time it is very tough to consider his message due to the fact it is almost to the factor the place his is bashing Jesus... |
racism | I without a doubt agree with him on the notion that anyone one from Christians to Muslims to even atheist all like Jesus. From this announcement forward he then goes to exhibit why all these eoples view of Jesus might also in fact be not so accurate. Strauss starts off with a query that brings an assumption that Jesus... |
racism | Personally, I do not like this assumption that Jesus was once done for actions that are seen as questionable. Furthermore, Strauss then uses Albert Schweitzer and his writings that talk about that the picture of Jesus was modified by rationalistic scholars into a gentleman and philanthropist (Pg. 12). Strauss compares ... |
racism | Williams with that we have an altered view of Jesus to make him seem perfect, I do not agree with Strauss on his thoughts of how we exchange our understanding of Jesus. People in todays society do view Jesus in a very wonderful light, however being honest, I suppose this light is nicely deserved and perhaps it is now n... |
racism | In the film Remember the Titans directed by Yakin Boaz we embark on the journey of an American Football team who now has to integrate an all white school with an all black school. This was the kick off to an epic journey of surpassing society’s doubts of how interaccial friendships can’t be maintained due to the many d... |
racism | We see how meeting different people changes our perspective was when the pair lay out their cards on the table and express their honest opinion on each other. When they looked at each other it was with revulsion and fear. Gerry tells Julius “See man, that’s the worst attitude I ever heard.” which Julius replies with “A... |
racism | ” In this instant Gerry realised that Julius was right and, the following day he made the team realise that no matter what race you belonged to, at the end of the day you all belonged to the same team: ‘The Titans.’ Gerry and Julius made sure the team realised the importance of working together as a team so they can do... |
racism | Coach Boone made the effort to unite both teams together, as one, for the first time in Virginia. One of the first times we see this is when Boone purposefully forces the two races to sit together on the bus to camp he says “Listen up, I don’t care if you’re black, green, blue, white, or orange, I want all of my defens... |
racism | In this day and age some people believe that racism is over because there are no longer any slaves, some people believe that there is still racism but that’s alright. I believe that those people would benefit a great deal from seeing this movie. I know that there is still racism, I also understand that it’s not accepta... |
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