1. Should have a job
2. Should be drug-free
3. Should be able to pass drug screenings if necessary
aron's civics blog
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
BR-3/27/14
I think that Justices do not need to serve life terms because it could be stressful to them and they could not perform to their full potential. I also think that the American people should vote on Justices so that way they can voice their opinion on that particular body of our nations government. If the people get to vote on Supreme Court Justices, they will voice their votes and get their opinion across on the situation at hand. On another note, the Justices in the Supreme Court shouldn't have to serve life terms because they also have their retirement to look ahead to. I mean sure they can retire when they want, but it would be helpful to them to not have to do life at one job.
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Notes
Dr. King: "Judicial decrees may not change the heart, but they can restrain the heartless."
1870s to 1950s no meaningful legislation passed on civil rights
Civil rights Act of 1964: 1. Voting provisions
2. public services could no longer deny access
3. Federal funding could not discriminate
4. employers or labor unions
Civil rights act of 1968: "open housing act"
Title IX: forbids discrimination on the basis of gender
Affirmative action:
Requires employers to take positive steps to fix the affects of past discrimination
Employers must meet quotas for minority groups/genders
Many argue this results in reverse discrimination: Discrimination against the majority
"Color Blind"
The Bakke Case: Sued University of California
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor predicts in 25 years the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary
Sec. 4: Citizenship and Immigration
An American citizen is a person that swears allegiance to the U.S.
Citizenship not important in 1860's
14th Amendment (1868)
Citizenship by birth
Naturalization: Legal process when someone can become a citizen to another country
Congress wrote laws on citizenship
Collective naturalization: when an entire group is granted citizenship through en masse.
Expatriation: abandoning your citizenship
Illegal for Congress to take away citizenship
denaturalization: when someone loses their citizenship
Marriage doesn't make you a citizen, just shortens the naturalization process
Immigration: 270,000 immigrants allowed into the US every year
Immigration act of 1990 allows 675,000 immigrants into the US each year and is similar to the old immigration act.
Some people are denied access to the country
Deportation: legal process by which aliens are required to leave the country
Biggest reason for deportation: Conviction of a serious crime
1870s to 1950s no meaningful legislation passed on civil rights
Civil rights Act of 1964: 1. Voting provisions
2. public services could no longer deny access
3. Federal funding could not discriminate
4. employers or labor unions
Civil rights act of 1968: "open housing act"
Title IX: forbids discrimination on the basis of gender
Affirmative action:
Requires employers to take positive steps to fix the affects of past discrimination
Employers must meet quotas for minority groups/genders
Many argue this results in reverse discrimination: Discrimination against the majority
"Color Blind"
The Bakke Case: Sued University of California
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor predicts in 25 years the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary
Sec. 4: Citizenship and Immigration
An American citizen is a person that swears allegiance to the U.S.
Citizenship not important in 1860's
14th Amendment (1868)
Citizenship by birth
Naturalization: Legal process when someone can become a citizen to another country
Congress wrote laws on citizenship
Collective naturalization: when an entire group is granted citizenship through en masse.
Expatriation: abandoning your citizenship
Illegal for Congress to take away citizenship
denaturalization: when someone loses their citizenship
Marriage doesn't make you a citizen, just shortens the naturalization process
Immigration: 270,000 immigrants allowed into the US every year
Immigration act of 1990 allows 675,000 immigrants into the US each year and is similar to the old immigration act.
Some people are denied access to the country
Deportation: legal process by which aliens are required to leave the country
Biggest reason for deportation: Conviction of a serious crime
BR-4/8/14
This article is about how President Obama is trying to strengthen the equal pay protection. Although it will only protect federal jobs, it is a good thing for the nation.
Monday, April 7, 2014
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Discrimination picture

1. What's going on in the picture? Japanese Americans are being held in internment camps during WWII after the Pearl Harbor bombing.
2. What is happening in America at the time? WWII
3. What do the people's faces reflect? They are scared and angry.
4. Give an example of how this might happen today. If America was attacked by another Asian country.
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
BR-4/2/14
I think the hardest part will be not talking for two of the groups and asking for permission for the other. I also think that doing everything together is going to be hard for the other group
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)