Sunday, May 1, 2011

Letter to the President

Dear Mr. President:
We have seen in the past that the Marshall Plan works. After World War Two, we spent nearly thirteen billion helping Europe rebuild what we had helped to damage, and, in return, we have friendly relations. We have also seen how not aiding countries we have harmed has backfired, and we have gone to war over it. At the ends of current wars as well as future ones, I believe that “nation building” should be utilized as much as possible. Our last President grew to accept the Marshall plan (although he never truly enacted it), despite dismissing “Nation Building” during his run for President, and I believe you should, too.  It will help to boost foreign relations, and potentially prevent future wars or attacks. How our current war (Afghanistan) ends, will provide context for how the next one begins. If we help to rebuild their nation after the war is over, through providing people, resources, and money, we will fare much better in the future. I advise you to use the Marshall Plan when this war is over, to do what is best for this country. Thank you.



Sources:

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Semester Deux, Blog Eleven

"If you were President, how would you confront the multiple issues surrounding the Geneva Conventions that we have discussed in class over the past week?"

If I were President, I would reform Guantanamo Bay, so that the Geneva Conventions are being followed and no international or state laws are being questioned or broken. By keeping the location, but changing the rules, there would be no "not-in-my-backyard hysteria" that would happen with moving the inmates to a new location. If Guantanamo Bay was made into something more similar to a normal prison, the prisoners would have more rights, such as to a fair trial, but there wouldn't need to be any relocation.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Honors Blog Two


December 10th, 1941
Dear Friend,
            I’m not sure how to feel. As you may have heard by now, three days ago, on December 7th, Pearl Harbor was bombed. Being Nisei, I’m conflicted about the enemy, but this attack on my home state of Hawaii makes me want to fight back. I was set to be drafted, but, after these Japanese attacks, Japanese American men are categorized as enemy aliens! I still want to help my country, but I’m not sure how I’m going to go about it. I’ll let you know as soon as I figure out what I’m doing.
Signed,
a Soldier




March 23rd, 1942
Dear Friend,
            Still no news on my plans for helping our country in this war, but I wanted to check up on you. I heard that the President just signed an Executive order that allows the government to move people at their discretion, and that Japanese Americans are being targeted. In fact, earlier this month, Lieutenant General John L. DeWitt issued a military proclamation that ended with the forced removal of more than 100,000 people of Japanese descent on the West Coast! Are you okay? Have you been affected by this proclamation? Luckily, here in Hawaii, I don’t have to worry about such proclamations because over one-third of our population is Japanese. It would simply be impractical for our economy. Also, the War Department just called for the removal of all Japanese Soldiers from active duty. How am I supposed to help my country if I can’t fight for them?
Signed,
a Soldier




April 14th, 1943
Dear Friend,
            Finally some good news! On February 1st, the United States Government reversed its decision on not allowing those of Japanese descent to serve in the military. This was due the success of an experimental grouping of Japanese Americans who completed construction jobs during the war, first known as the Varsity Victory Volunteers, and now as the 100th Infantry Battalion. The Government has even approved the formation of a Japanese American combat unit! I’m definitely interested in volunteering for this unit. Apparently, there is a lot of interest in it, especially from Hawaii. More than 75% of those interviewed indicated they would be willing to serve this country, and I’ve heard that nearly 10,000 Hawaiian men are planning to volunteer. Considering that the U.S. army is only calling for 1,500 Hawaiian men, I’m not sure how great my chances are of getting in. I’m going to try anyways! I’ll keep you updated on what happens.
Signed,
a Soldier




August 2nd, 1944
Dear Friend,
            I know it’s been a while since I last mailed, but a lot has happened. Even better news than last time! I’ve been enlisted in the war, in the 442nd infantry. Hawaii is such a proud state, that more Japanese Americans enlisted here than from the mainland, and so – in the end – there are 3000 Hawaiian men in this infantry, along with 800 from the mainland. We met up with the unit responsible for the creation of the 442nd – the 100th Infantry – and they joined us to create a larger unit. We’ve gotten our fight song from them – “Four-Forty-Second Infantry— We're the boys of Hawai'i nei— We'll fight for you And the Red, White and Blue, And go to the front... And back to Honolulu-lulu. Fighting for dear old Uncle Sam Go for broke! HOOH! We don't give a damn!We'll round up the Huns At the point of our guns, And vict'ry will be ours! GO FOR BROKE! FOUR-FOUR-TWO! GO FOR BROKE! FOUR-FOUR-TWO! And vict'ry will be ours!Isn’t it inspiring? Our units went into battle together on the 26th of June, in Belvedere, Vienna. We showed those Germans that we could hold our own! I’m feeling good about how our Infantry will fare during this war.
Signed,
a Soldier




January 3rd, 1945
Dear Friend,
            The War is over. The Germans have been defeated. I’m amazed I lasted from start to finish in the 442nd Infantry. Our initial group of 4,000 men had to be replaced 3.5 times – at the end, nearly 14,000 men served with us. Despite our relatively small size, our unit was the most decorated for its length of service. In total, our members were received 18,143  awards, including 21 Medals of Honor, 52 Distinguished Service Crosses, and 9,486 Purple Hearts. Our great work in the war led to a change of heart of many anti-Japanese critics in the U.S., and the release of our people. Unfortunately, much of the U.S. still haven’t changed their views on us, and it’s not easy. I came home to signs saying “No Japs Allowed”, and discrimination from many. Oh well. I’m proud of what I did in the war, and will have to just face what was waiting for me. Until next time.
Signed,
a Soldier


Thursday, April 14, 2011

WW2 Imagery

    • The USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay on the day of the surrender of Japan, September 2, 1945.
    • I found this image interesting because it really showed the extent of the war, and exhibited the use of military technology such as airplanes and boats.






















    • Created by Wesley in 1943, for the Office of War Information.
    • I liked this piece of propaganda, because it was supposed to affect you emotionally, in order to prevent you from discussing was information. 
















    • African-American war bond volunteers, Pittsburgh, PA, circa 1944.
    • I thought that this photo did a good job of capturing America during WW2, because it portrays the effort behind the war, of those who spent their time and energy supporting those at war.

    Wednesday, April 13, 2011

    Honors Novel Blog

     ‘We’, by Yevgeny Zamyatin, is a novel that was finished in 1921, that uses the author’s personal experience during the Russian Revolution of 1905, to portray a distant future. This future takes place after the ‘two hundred year’s war’, through which only .2% of the Earth’s population has survived. The book follows D-503 (all those living in this future are known only as numbers), who lives within the walls of the One State. The One State is where all numbers reside, under the Benefactor, who is the ruler of this world, and is re-elected unanimously every year. Everyone in this future is essentially brainwashed, where they comply with any rules or orders given to them by the One State, and anything done to the contrary leads to a public execution. Symbolically, everything is mathematical and precise. From their poetry to their music (“The crystalline chromatic measures of converging and diverging infinite series… What grandeur! What imperishable logic! And how pathetic the capricious music of the ancients, governed by nothing but wild fantasies…” as the main character describes) to their schedules and even their names, numbers and precision are important and necessary. All are even required to don uniforms. Their homes are clear, and privacy is nonexistent. The main theme of this book is of a dystopian future – this dictatorship that these numbers live with is not optional, and outside the green wall that holds them in is supposedly of an uninhabitable, post-apocalyptic world, left over from the ‘two hundred year’s war’. The main character, D-503, is the builder of the Integral – a spaceship intended to bring the kind of thinking of the One State to other distant planets, and to conquer them, as they have Earth.  However, things begin to go awry when D-503 begins to have dreams, and feels out-of-touch with the rest of the numbers. When he realizes he has a soul, he is distraught that he has caught this ‘sickness’. He compares this uncertainty to when he was a boy and first encountered the square root of negative one – “This irrational number had grown into me like something foreign, alien, terrifying. It devoured me – it was impossible to conceive, to render harmless, because it was outside ratio.” It’s once he has acquired this soul, and comes to term with it, that he is clued in to the rebellion at hand to bring down the Benefactor and the One State. After an attempt to seize control of the Integral, those in revolt are found out, and it is required that every number undergo ‘The Operation’. This operation is to destroy your imagination, so, as a result, “You are perfect. You are machinelike. The road to the one hundred per cent happiness is free. Hurry, then, everyone—old and young—hurry to submit to the Great Operation.” Although many attempts are made to avoid this operation, in the end D-503 is forced to undergo it. He wakes up rid of his sickness – free from his imagination – and ready to serve the One State.

    Thursday, March 17, 2011

    Honors Blog One

    High wages in America, in comparison to other countries, led to many foreigners, such as those from Britain and Germany, leaving their homes to work in America, so that they could be treated more fairly. These movements helped to give birth to the first labor unions in the United States of America. One early example of a union was Knights of St. Crispin, which formed in 1867, and gained 50,000 members in just three years, making it the largest of its kind in the country. These workers were against new, unskilled workers coming in to work machinery, thus taking away jobs from those who once did it by hand. Unfortunately, this union was unorganized and fell apart not too long after its creation. The Knights of St. Crispin gave way to the Knights of Labor, which came about in 1869. This group worked as a united front, seeking fairness for all laborers and producers. However, these Knights fell apart as well, when, during the Haymarket Riot of 1886, their strikes failed and were simply misunderstood and confused with bomb-making anarchists. 
    From the ashes of the Knights rose a new union, in 1886 - the AFL (American Federation of Labor). Founded by Samuel Gompers, this group set the organizational example for years to come as a national federation of skilled workers' union. Their ranks grew steadily over the years, increasing from 200,000 and 1,750,000 members between 1886 and 1904. This popular group focused on the rights of skilled crafts workers, rather than that of industrial workers. With an opposing view, the IWW (Industrial Workers of the World), started in 1905, worked on industrial unionism. At most, this group contained 150,000 members, but faced such opposition during and after World War one, that many of its members were killed, and nearly 10,000 of them imprisoned.The IWW still exists today, with around 2,000 members, but had its main impact during its first fifteen years, during which it showed unskilled industrial workers that they could be organized, and gave them self-worth.
    Despite the effects that it had on the IWW, World War One was a time during which unions grew drastically - the number of organized workers jumped from 2.75 million in 1917, to 4.25 million in 1919. The Wilson administration encouraged this growth of unions, as a way to energize the working class behind the war effort. To recognize the role laborers played in winning the war, the International Labor Organization was formed in 1919. Work conditions improved considerably, with the standard work day lowering to about eight hours a day, and the hourly wages rising. Similar things transpired during the second world war, when all labor unions supported the war effort. In 1947, the Taft-Hartley Act came about, which placed restrictions on both unions and managements. This act was a response to the postwar strikes that were said to have damaged the economy. Unions fought this change bitterly, because it prohibited unfair labor practices on their part, such as jurisdictional strikes. Strikes were a large part of acquiring the safety that unions give, and made great impacts. One important strike in history, for example, the Postal Worker's Strike, of 1970, consisted of  210,000 out of 750,000 postal workers striking, and Nixon having to declare a state of emergency. In the end, after two weeks of striking, the workers received many of the things they asked for.
    Labor Unions are still alive today, as a way to protect workers from unfair treatment and work. However, union membership is becoming less popular, and has dropped 8% in recent years - bringing the percentage down to one not seen since 1932. While they are still active, people are seeming less interested, and striking has become nearly non-existant. Will unions die off soon, as workers become interested, and find it unnecessary? Only time will tell. 

    Tuesday, March 1, 2011

    Outstanding Ampersand Article Pitches

    These pitches stood out to me, because they sound like actual pitches, not just thrown together ideas. Each article pitch seems solid and well thought-out, as well as interesting. The pitches seem unique, rather than just "my internship was at _________, and I did ______________.", and the pitches seem to contain some of the questions that he could use to drive his article, and so he has a good starting point for each of the three pitches.

    The pitches on this blog stood out to me, because the writer spent her internship as a teacher, as I did. So, these pitches gave me perspective on what I might want to do in my article, and I saw similarities between my pitches and hers. I think that all three pitches - how she grew during her internship as a teacher, how working with the students affected her, and she first had this experience as a student, and now as a teacher - are all well thought out, and would make a good article. 

    I think that the pitches on this blog were good, because all of the ideas were creative and stood on their own - there weren't any weak ideas. The pitches were unique, such as her first one, in which she proposed an article through an animal's perspective once they entered a veterinary hospital. The other article pitches, about describing a specific room or tool in detail, would also make good pieces of writing, because they aren't about your average internship experience.