A long, long time ago in a country not so far away, the king and queen of Spain decided they wanted to find a better way to get to China in order to have many more splendid robes. Back in the olden days, the Silk Road in China was popular. Anybody who was anybody wanted to find a way to get there by sea. What better way to exert superiority than to send an explorer in search of the first water route to Asia? So, the king and queen gave this important job to a young explorer by the name of Christopher Columbus. The poor man was so terrible at directions, he landed on a completely new continent that was certainly not Asia. Columbus decided to name this new land “America.” Soon after telling of his discovery, several European nations began settling in the New World. The only problem they faced, other than new diseases and famine for the first few years, was the natives that were already living there. What started out as a peaceful …show more content…
Human rights is an issue that may never fully be resolved any time soon. There are too many ideas of what makes up a “perfect society.” Someone will always be turned down for an interview because their name is Tyrone or Quintana. Richard is more likely to be hired over Tracy. Jackson will more than likely lose his job opportunity the moment he checks the “sexual orientation” box on his application form. The fact is, even though America is the “land of the free,” until there are entirely equal rights for every single human being, discrimination and prejudice will live on. It is about time Americans and take advice from John Updike: “Life’s too short to be miserable” (Updike 642). Everyone else is more comfortable remaining voiceless rather than fighting for humans that have had their rights stolen. Not everyone is the same, but that's not important. There is no freedom until all Americans are
In 1492, the world was forever changed when Columbus discovered the new world. This exciting news inspired hundreds of new explorers to come see what else the world has to offer. The explorers were Europeans who traveled the Atlantic ocean to conquer the Americas. They wanted to conquer the Americas for glory and gold. The Europeans wanted to make their country the best and they had already experienced brutal wars in Europe for the fame. They had experience, and the Americas did not scare them. The colonization process happened from a span of 1500-1600. The native populations who lived in the Americas had to suffer drastically, as they saw their home land get destroyed. The native populations of the New World suffered due to the purposeful
In the wake of Europe’s Age of Exploration, explorers roamed different parts of the ocean in search of a faster water route to Asia. Along the way, Europeans explorers discovered a whole new continent, America. Thinking that he was in India, Christopher Columbus, an Italian sailor, called the indigenous Native Americans he met “Indians,” a misnomer that is still used frequently even up to this day. Europeans soon shifted their attention away from the water route to Asia but toward the colonization of the New World. With a desire to have a new life different from that of the Old World, many Europeans landed on the shores of the new continent and settled in communities. However, almost all kinds of European colonization faced this
For more than five centuries, Christopher Columbus has been recognized and glorified as the founder of America in the US and Spain. As an adolescent, I learned that Columbus, an explorer with unrealistic beliefs about the earth being indeed round and not flat as it was once deemed to be, discovered America and named its natives “Indians.” However, I have grown to realize that this glorified hero Columbus is portrayed as is as realistic as the Easter bunny or tooth fairy. The actual truth about Columbus is far more complicated and less magical than what we have come to accept as fact. In fact, despite the tactics used to claim land that did not belong to them, I consider Christopher Columbus and Hernan Cortez savages whose agenda was not to
Without intention in 1492, Christopher Columbus initiated an event that is perhaps the most important historical turning point in modern times to the American Continents. “For thousands of years before 1492, human societies in Americas had developed in isolation from the rest of the world.”(P. 4) Christopher Columbus and other European voyagers ended all this beginning in 1492 as they searched for treasure and attempted to spread Christianity. For the first time people from Europe, Africa, and the Americas were in regular contact. This 1492 event brought together three worlds politically, culturally and environmentally and led to what historians refer to as The Columbian Exchange which acted as a merging of European and American natives’ cultures
In 1492, Christopher Columbus unintentionally discovered America, when he landed in the Caribbean Islands, while looking for a direct sea route to Asia. Despite the fact that Columbus believed he had found a direct sea route to India, he has been called the discoverer of America and hailed as a hero. More recently, however, he has been called a villain, with accusations saying that not only did he not discover America, but also that he was the cause of slavery and oppression in the Americas. These allegations are absurd and lack logical evidence.
In 1492, Italian cartographer and explorer, Christopher Columbus, set off on a mission from Spain in order to find a quicker, alternative route to Asia. With him, Columbus brought eighty-seven men and three ships, the Niña, the Pinta, and the Santa María, to sail across the large and vast Atlantic Ocean. Unfortunately for Columbus, a new route to Asia was never discovered by Spain that year because he had arrived in the Caribbean, which was found in North America. Thinking that he had just entered the Indies, he started to call the people of this land, “Indians”. These Indians were actually Native Americans who had lived on these lands for thousands of years prior. Immediately, letters from Columbus to the King and Queen of Spain were sent by boat back to Europe and soon Columbus was seen as the man who helped create a bridge of prosperous trading and riches between Europe and “Asia”.1 While this discovery proved that Columbus was a hero-like figure to Spain, it’s what he did within the new land that actually makes him one of the biggest villains to ever set foot on Earth. But what classifies this explorer as a villain? Columbus captured thousands of natives, many of which were sent back to Spain to live and work as slaves. Along with that, Columbus also forced the Christian religion onto them, spread diseases that killed thousands of lives, and used violence as a means of persuasion and control.2 Corrupted by his pursuit of riches,
In 1492, Christopher Columbus sailed west and found himself on the shores of a new world. His mission was to secure new land for Spain. Other European countries heard of his findings, they too crossed the ocean in hopes of securing new opportunities in this newly discovered land such as fur trading and gold mining. Little did they know that a community of indigenous people had already settled in this land thousands of years before. The Europeans decided to negotiate with the natives in order to set up their own communities in the land but the Native Americans held beliefs about society and religion that were far different from their European peers. Europeans thought the Indians to be “Noble Savages, gentle and friendly, but uncivilized, brutal, and barbaric” (citation). They could not see past their own
In August of 1492 Columbus set sail from Spain hoping to soon arrive in Asia, but a few months later he arrived in the Bahamas and claimed it as new land. He thought he had discovered a new land, but little did he know— or care—that this land was already inhabited by a group of Indigenous peoples called Native Americans. Columbus proceeded to take over this land, exploit it for its riches, and abuse
When Columbus set sail to find the East Indies in 1492, he found something much different, the West Indies, a completely different place nobody had known about, he had founded the New World. While falsely being known for finding North America, as he never even stepped food in North America, instead he found islands such as the Bahamas and Hispaniola. In Hispaniola, however, Columbus and his people unjustly slayed more than 12 million indigenous people of the Caribbean. These acts didn’t just happen because they were cruel, but they were money-hungry greedy people as well. They were cruel people that slaughtered Hispaniola’s people, all for the pursuit of money.
Humans have established their own rights in society for many, many years now. However, because some humans differ from the norms that are built in society, they are shunned and denied their rights until they conform to society’s norms. There has been numerous groups of people who have been denied their rights in America. African Americans, immigrants, Native Americans, and gays have been isolated simply because that is the way that they were born into this world and others do not find them “normal”. There is another group that has also been mistreated though; people who identify themselves as transgendered. A good portion of society is unknowingly misinformed about these kinds of people.
Everyone in America is able to live there because of Columbus and his crew. What if America was never discovered until the 2000’s? What if the people that discovered America was corrupt and set the many lives of America in danger? Christopher Columbus did the exact opposite of these scenarios which is that he provided for the citizens and gave them a good life to live in. Christopher Columbus is known for killing and “stealing” the land of the Native Americans. These would include the Tiano tribe. This is of course not a good idea for Columbus, but whether or not he killed them he is still the man who made the people of America possible to even live in these kinds of
Human Rights are the rights everyone is supposed to be given no matter their discrepancies. Although many don’t realize it human rights play a huge role in our everyday lives. It may seem like they do not affect people. Our world acts as a safe little bubble, and as the world outside of our safe little bubble is examined, it’s realized that what many take for granted, others don’t even have. Some don’t even have the basic rights most are given. But without them the world would be a whole lot different.
As we all know, the founder of the North America and South America is a voyager whose name is Christopher Columbus. After having read the story of the famous merchant-Marco Polo, he became to looking forward to the land of wealthy and mystery-China. He believed that the earth is round so he decided to sailed west from Europe, then he would reach the Asia. But he didn’t land on the land of the China, he found the new land instead. After he found the America, there are lots of common on his discovery. Then they divided to the different opinion, the positive and the negative.
The setting is the fledgling country we now know as the United States. Christopher Columbus set out to find a direct path fit for sailors to travel from Europe to Asia, but instead established contact with the
LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) people are discriminated against, terrorized, and protested against. They have barely any laws guarding their rights. All Americans are supposed to have all the rights needed for their pursuit of happiness, yet LGBTQ+ citizens do not. This needs to stop. And the U.S., while still quite far away, is slowly on its way to equity for all of its citizens. But good LGBT Americans are mostly treated unfairly.