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Showing posts from 2019
The Struggle for a Better World  Prior to reading Between the World and Me , I was under the impression that everyone collectively would be responsible for “the birth of a better world”. But when Coates tells his son that “a better world is not ultimately up to you,'' he is referring to the fact that it is ultimately up to the wealthy Americans in power that refer to themselves at white, and that young black men (like Samori) are not able to make such advances in life. In the beginning of the novel, the Ta-Nehisi Coates describes his recollection of an interview with a popular news show host. Coates says that she asked him about his body, but soon after asks about “hope”, as he discloses that “I knew that I had failed” (10). The news host is almost completely disregarding the words he had supplied for her previous question. His ideas of how America is and always has been white America don’t go through to her. She seems to be convinced that the prejudice towards African-Am

Values

Humor While watching the NBC show Saturday Night Live over the weekend, I tried to force myself to find some value of American society conveyed through one of the skits. I wanted something obvious, like capitalism, equality, freedom, or maybe education. But as it went on, and as the actors & actresses poked fun at various aspects of our society, I came to realize that we value humor. I took an hour or two out of the day to watch this, along with everyone else in the country who watched it. The value of humor is evident on the North Shore and in American society as a whole. People today, especially those in the audience at SNL for example, may have certain feelings associated with what’s going on in political news these days. So when Beck Bennett (acting as Mike Pence) elaborated that the president is “meeting with an alligator breeder about filling in a moat at the border”, or when Michael Che explained that “Trump keeps sayin’ that there was ‘no quid pro quo’, which