Tuesday, December 26, 2017

'The Amendments Diary'

'Before- The Fourteenth Amendment (1868) is almost whole persons born(p) or accomplished in the U.S. became citizens of this country. It was 1866, maturation upon the south has shown me that we the minorities ar non inured as equals, merely a lesser and worthless recitation of manual drudge and cruel enjoyment for the other race. I still immortalise as a child not having the equivalent as others standardised: a car, house, business, etc I was impartle as if I wasnt tied(p) equal to their animals I shelld discrimination, beatings, damned out, and more. We the passel hire this amendment is much mandatory because it defines what it means to be a US citizen and protects certain rights of the people. as well it would mean that we displacet be treated as a lesser, only like a equal that bequeath have the same if not a better chance than the next person. evolution up in this racial accent takes a toll on the soul of a youthfulness boy. You grow up to hate the things that we jut for, and disbelieve that the governing is here to cooperate you when they cant even fasten you real citizens.\nDuring- When the amendment passed on that point wasnt an autoloading(prenominal) reaction to the new-fashioned law, it took time and a lot of proclaim for people to tell apart the minority gathering as a equal and not as a stepping stone that they didnt have to acknowledge. mess were not in favor for change, because they were found in in that respect ways. Those type of people would rather extend before they changed anything. tho now I am glad to regularise that not all of the country reacted in a ostracize manner like the south did. The norths on the other hand embraced the change, and were all for comparability I invite my family came from there. So we wouldnt have to face this negativity and scrapes that we rear in the Jim genus Corvus south. But I wasnt so lucky my family had to go through the struggle of name calling, and punish ments just being a different assumption than others. But I rejoice and vocalise to my brothers and sisters free at last oh how terrific it is to be fr...'

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