Glancing out my window, I see two contrasting apartment buildings, one white and one brown. It's an accepted fact that these low-income apartments are occupied only by the laziest people mooching off the government. All I see are single moms striving for a better lives and disabled people making the best of their situation. These are the laziest people? If everyone accepts a statement as fact, does that make it true? Glancing to the east, I should see the sun rising every morning yet all I see is a house sitting considerably higher than my own, almost as if on a pedestal. Atop this pedestal sit neighbors who look the other way when we wave or smile at them. Are they like this to everyone, or just to their Hispanic neighbors. My mind can't
Being Hispanic means two different things to me, and I find myself to be a pendulum swinging back and forth between them every once in a while. On the one hand, being Hispanic means that people will always assume things about me that may or may not be true. I’m part Mexican, so I must like spicy foods, right? My last name is Fuentes, so I must speak Spanish, right? I’m Hispanic, so I must be destined to be a poor minority for the rest of my life, right? To all of these questions, and more, my answer is a firm “no.” Yet, that’s part of what being Hispanic means for me: Constantly dealing with the ignorant people who can’t help but put people into neat little boxes based on skin color or their ethnicity. When I swing to that side of the topic,
majority of the white neighbors seen in the book treat their African neighbors with contempt if it
From the outside looking in people would think that the people that live in the city of Benton Harbor are in poverty. Let me change that from would do, just a few days ago I was scrolling on Facebook and just so happen to see the documentary on our football team. And the first thing that the narrator said related to the city of Benton Harbor being poor, full of violence, and how bad that our circumstances are. But what really made me start to think was the fact that he said the population of Benton Harbor is 90% black. And with that being said it will make people who are watching that documentary think that black people are poor or do not succeed in life. And when I say this I am not only speaking for the black people in Benton Harbor I am
Most people think they know the causes of homelessness and we often find ourselves very quick to judge. Stereotypically a lot of people think the homeless have brought
The First World War was a war of many firsts. Not only was it the first true contemporary war, but it was also the first war that introduced new forms of industrial warfare, which resulted in many repercussions. One of these repercussions was the development of shell-shock or neurosis as a result of war in soldiers returning from the battle front. In “All Quiet on the Western Front” by Enrich Maria Remarque the psychological effect of industrial warfare on soldiers was depicted as a paradoxical combination of exhilaration on the battlefront as well as a deep state of numbness and melancholy.
It is easy for people who belong to the economic elite to look down on those who are homeless as view them as inferior. Since the effects of homelessness may only catch their attention when they are driving on their way into work and see a man on the corner with a cardboard sign. Those in the upper class are less likely to be as tolerable towards these individuals. There opinions would lean on the side of the person-blame approach of attribution. When we consider that the majority of Americans live in the lower and middle class levels of society, the likelihood of acceptance for those who are homeless can be greater since they have more exposure in their communities to the homeless population. Individual interpretations suggest that homelessness is the result of personal deficiencies, such as substance abuse and social disaffiliation, whereas structural interpretations suggest that it is the result of systemic factors, such as lack of affordable housing and employment opportunities (Cronely, 2010). The lower class beliefs of homelessness can be directed towards the system-blame approach, feeling that the individuals are where they are as a result of a flaw in society. People who consider homelessness a structural problem are more likely to favor government action than those believing in individualistic causes (Lee, Lewis, & Jones, 1992).
As a Hispanic woman and being from south Texas most people who are not familiar with how Hispanics are would think that
My background is interesting. My twin sister and I were raised by parental grandmother until she passed away due to lung cancer when I was 11 years of age. My grandmother had 15 children and raised 2 more. My diverse experiences in life begin here. My Mother was Caucasian and my father was Hispanic, both born and raised in Texas. Both of my families were similar but very different. They were similar in that they were of low economic status, but very different because of their beliefs and their culture. My Hispanic family believed and still believes that God is number one in life (prayed before every meal) and that you respect everyone regardless of how they may treat you. My Hispanic family believed in helping one another when given the opportunity.
They are all ilegales, mojados. This is what some say about hispanics. They say that t you need to elaborate on this.This is called a stereotype. A stereotype is a widely held but oversimplified image or idea of a particular type of person or thing. Why do we have stereotypes? Because we love to group people. Our society loves to tell people who they can, and will be. “People think that I should act a certain way because of my sex, personality, nationality, race and gender.” This quote is how many people feel when they are stereotyped. They feel like they have to be a certain way to fit in.
As we have read in Healey’s (2011) textbook, the term “Hispanic” has been used to describe all different kinds of minority races, such as, Puerto Ricans and Cubans , etc., under the same token (pg. 318). The government identifies Mexican Americans and other minority races that have similarities in both appearance and cultural characteristics under one term (Healey, 2011, pg. 318). This causes the perception that they are all the same, taking away the individualistic origins of their place, culture, beliefs, etc. Most of all, this classifies false/mistaken assumptions that they are all immigrants, poor and same language speaking individuals, damaging each race’s individuality. Socially, the term Hispanic technically only classifies groups as
Statistics show people living in poverty are most at risk of becoming homeless. Economically they are at a higher risk of losing what little they already have.
The homeless population is shortly on the rise. In New York City, we see the current issue as about 800 individuals right now live meandering the roads and the metro stations. There has been a surprising development of the homeless and as of late in the news, Pennsylvania station has seen an enormous increment in the quantity of homeless. In 2010, New York saw the homeless populace diminish by an incredible 29 percent from the 2005 record numbers. Shockingly for each 2,688 individuals in the city of New York City, it is assessed that one is homeless. As of late New York City has modified its notoriety as in it no more has a focus as extensive as equivalent cities. Strangely, on the off chance that you examine the homeless populace in Chicago you can see that for each 1,810 individuals, one is homeless and with respect to Los Angeles 1 in 154 are homeless. Things being what they are, is the homeless populace in a smooth decay or is this just a mathematical error?
All modernist writers had emphasis on certain techniques in their common style of writing. Was this interesting to the reader? In "Hills Like White Elephants", written by Ernest Hemingway, his modernist approach could cause most readers to not have an emotional connection to the story.
Another factor is the belief that crime occurs in public housing because of “that is the way it is.” I primarily work the housing developments and I get so tired of hearing that someone feels sorry for me because I work there. Most
However, many Hispanic families were and in some cases, still are viewed as lower-class citizens. According to Barrientos, “To me, speaking Spanish translated into being poor. It meant waiting tables and cleaning hotel rooms. It meant being left off the cheerleading squad and receiving a condescending smile from the guidance counselor when you said you planned on becoming a lawyer or a doctor” (561). They are not respected in a lot of communities, they live dirty, and they have bad jobs. These stereotypes are reasons why Barrientos did not want to be called Mexican and never wanted to learn Spanish. If diversity had been celebrated when Barrientos was a child, as it is celebrated and honored now, she would have grown up speaking Spanish and being proud of her heritage.