Sunday, March 22, 2020

Day The Music Died Essays - Lecturers, On The Pleasure Of Hating

Day The Music Died The Day the Music Died, Again I think about the loss we have endured, I think about our future, I think about the hate in this world, and it all makes me cry. September 11th was my 17th birthday, and I was sitting on the line at the DMV, listening to my car radio as it all happened. The music actually died that day. Not a single station played a song; instead they all talked of the horror unfolding before us. I'm angry, I'm disgusted, and I'm afraid of tomorrow. I know what caused this, and I don't know if there is anything we can really do. Hate is responsible. How can we stop the hating going on everywhere? I only know of one way to break the endless cycle of hate causing more hate. The only way is to just stop hating without reason. Americans need to stand together now more than ever. We need to stop hating people who talk funny, or look funny, or are just plain different from ourselves. The racism has to go first and foremost. There is no room for that worthless waste of energy. There is no doubt in my mind, that America is the strongest country containing the world's greatest people. I can say that with great enthusiasm because I've always thought it to be true, and now it has been proven. Music Essays

Thursday, March 5, 2020

Deciphering The Presidentials Tapes Watergate essays

Deciphering The Presidentials Tapes Watergate essays Ever since I can remember I have always heard, whether over the news or on an educational channel, about the Watergate scandal. I never knew what the Watergate scandal was about, but I did know that it had to do with one our former Presidents. Before I read Breaking into Watergate I had no clue about all the lies and betrayals that went on in the highest and most prestigious office in America. It is very important as a history major to have read this article so that I am no longer oblivious to what went on in the Oval Office prior to June 7, 1972. As I started to read through this article the realization of what the Watergate scandal was, became more and more clear. The information that I read was very upsetting and discomforting. To know that a President of the United State would be so deceitful and disloyal to not only his piers but also to the people of the United States is very upsetting but unfortunately is not too uncommon these days. Reading about President Nixon trying to bribe witnesses with money and trying to blackmail the opposition was mind boggling. President Nixon did almost everything perfect and might of slipped past the accusations except for the fact that he forgot about the tapes that recorded his phone conversations. Donald Sanders was very smart to think of something that none of the other investigators thought of; a tapping system. Alexander Butterfield, when reminded that he was under oath, admitted that there was a recording system in the White House which no longer made John Deans testimony just his word against the Presidents(Breaking Into Watergate, 341). Knowing that John Dean would stand up and tell the truth, despite being told to do otherwise, makes at least one good moral story come out of the scandal. In the thirty years that the presidents had been making secret recordings, on and off, all of them had their different reasons. In nineteen forty Franklin Roosevelt had a...