Thursday, September 19, 2024

Post Reactions

     Sojourner Truth real name was Isabella Bumfree. She had been sold with a flock of sheep for 100$, which was a little odd because female slaves were very high in demand because they could make more slaves. Sojourner Truth had 13 children who were almost all lost to slavery. 

    Lucretia Mott was a white female abolitionist who fought for woman's rights and slave freedom. She help established the first women's rights convention. She gathered black and whites famous and non famous people such as Fredrick Douglas to help speak out.

    John Quincy Adams was the 6th president of the United States. He was one of the only 2 presidents who didn't own slaves. He made a gag rule to stop the anti-slavery talk. He made a clause that made every slave born after July 4 to be born free. 

    Elizabeth Buffam Chase was an abolitionist who lost her 5 children. Her community shunned her and her husband for their beliefs of abolition and total freedom. She also fought against racism by founding an anti-slavery organization. She set up the first underground railroad station in Rhode Island. 

    Abby Hailey Foster spent 20 years traveling the country for anti-slavery and women's rights. She was an organizer of the New England Women's Suffrage Association. She was a delegate to the first anti slavery convention for American women. She began to lecture people on anti-slavery using her knowledge of a teacher.

    John Brown was a studied ministry in Connecticut, before he had to quit because of an illness. Many of his children found careers in abolition. He supported anti slavery activists, and believed in immediate abolition. He traveled to Kansas and fought for the freedom of slaves to the legislature. He went to 5 slave owners and then executed them, because of how enraged he was of his hometown being persecuted. He then planned the raid on Harpers Ferry so he could overthrow slavery. His violence and brutal methods struck fear in the hearts of the slave masters, and inspired the slaves to rebel.

    

Leonard Grimes: A Virtuous Man


     I am Leonard Grimes, a black man born in 1815. Unlike others around this time period I was born to free parents. I was a mixed child, and people tended to regard me as a boy with a bright future. Being born in Leesburg, Virginia my freedom wasn't always secure, and it was subject to change at any moment. When I was a young teen we moved to Washington D.C where I worked as a butcher and an apothecary. I had to build up enough money to help support my family and to officially register myself as a free black man around the age of 20, even though I was born free.  

    I started to travel all around for work. I eventually ended up working for a slave holder in the deep south. Here I saw the atrocities and horrors of slavery. It was because I was free that allowed me to sympathize with the slaves. So I decided that I was going to use my freedom, to help others, I vowed to combat slavery. I became a conductor of the underground rail road unbeknownst to my family. I had a wife Octavia and four kids: Emma, John, Leonard Jr, and Julia, but at the time I only had two kids. As a conductor I had to have a solid coverup for this job. So I established myself as a prominent hackney driver. I transported politicians, professionals, and many other people around Washington D.C. In 1839, I got caught and sentenced to two years in prison. It was a surprise to many people because I was rather popular among blacks and whites at the time. Lucky for me I purchased my own property well before my arrest, so my family had a stable place to stay and didn't have to worry about the unjust persecution of the slaveholders.

   

    In 1846 a
fter I was released I moved my family to New Bedford Massachusetts in search of a new job, and stable living. Around this time whaling was very popular, but after being in jail my connection to the spiritual only grew deeper. I went on a trip to Boston in 1848 which was an abolitionist hotbed, this is where a congregation was in need of a minister. So I decided to step up to the plate with my faith, and drive to combat slavery to become a trial minister. I was so good that I ended up becoming a Baptist minister and a pastor of the new Twelve Baptist Church. The church became known as the "Fugitive's Church", because many of our members escaped from slavery. Then in 1850 the infamous Fugitive Slave Act was passed. The entire church was no longer safe, and it was a risk that the church was so well known.

    Everything was good enough until 1854 when one of the men who was in the church's district was captured. His name was Anthony Burns, and I figured that if we can save this one man, then we can make a statement for the entire race. We tried directly to free him from the Boston jail, but that didn't go as planned. His trial was famous, and really brought attention to the slave act. Burns lost his case, but I wasn't planning on stopping there, I led a fundraiser which raised 1,300 dollars and then traveled to Baltimore Maryland myself to purchase his freedom from a slave holder. After that, nobody persecuted fugitive slaves in Boston.

   

    When the civil war broke out I was invited to serve as the the norths chaplain. In other words, President Lincoln invited me to be on the clergy for the armed forces. This was a little above me, and I had developed an attachment to my church so I declined the offer. After the war and the 13th amendment I had worked to help the free men and women. I lived to see the 14th amendment granting life, liberty and property, and the 15th amendment right to vote for black men. I think I did a fair share of good in my life, that being said on March 14 1873, at the age of 60 I had been laid to rest.

Saturday, September 14, 2024

The Role of the Supreme Court


     The Supreme Court is a very important part of the judicial system. According to the video, with 9 justices they deliberate on very few cases, as little as less than 100 per year. All of these cases are picked by the justices, just because it gets sent doesn't mean they have to try it. Justices stay for a very long time and their decisions interpret the laws and how we apply them to our current lives. Of course they weren't always this powerful, after the creation of the supreme court it took 200 years for America to accept the word of the court. The saying "We the people" now encompasses everyone, but it used to only encompass eligible citizens which were typically white and most of the time male. Whenever a new judge gets appointed, they must all get together and take a new supreme justice portrait.

   


    The way cases get decided is a vote for if its constitutional, or if it not constitutional between judges and the more popular vote wins. You would think that people with opposing views would start to dislike each other but no, the justices actually do not hold grudges against each other. They have a job to do, and letting personal vendettas get in the way can seriously damage our country and interpretation of the constitution. A typical court decision is not a simple answer, it can range from 80 pages and up. All the pages are filled with evidence, reasonings, and arguments on why they made that decision. Justices converse in the courtroom with questions, points, and answers, all so they can get a better understand of the details and context of a case.

    A court case has to work its way up to the supreme court. Making it's way through the district, and appellate courts. With the 14th amendment every case needs the due process of the law and should be protected equally. This means that every case needs a decision, or a result the supreme court is the only court that has the power to reject cases. The supreme courts job is interpret and extend and shrink the boundaries of the rights we have as people, so understanding how they operate is very important. 

Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Slavery In the Bible: Was it Justified?

  INTRODUCTION

      As we know, slavery has been around for centuries and has only recently abolished in the year 1865. But the question that seems to be on my mind is was it justified? When we ask that question, there becomes two sides to a story
        

    But what we seem to forget is that slavery didn't just "happen." There is a reason why slavery has been around for so long; the Bible. Today, we will speak to both sides of the story; the side that argues in favor of the Bible justifying slavery, and the other side who does the complete opposite, and argues against the Bible justifying slavery.

ARGUMENT IN FAVOR OF SLAVERY  


        Before slavery was abolished many masters, if not all, used the Bible to justify their cruel and violent wrong doings. Slave masters would learn the Bible and would then proceed with a baptism. The problem with this is the change within the masters' mindset. A baptism gives most people a fresh start, or as I say, a wash from their previous sins. Because of this, masters believed that their wrong doings towards enslaved people were gone and forgiven.


        But why is it that slave masters start to believe that they have a right to treat enslaved people in the cruel way because of the Bible? Well, there are many times that the Bible does encourage slavery. For example,  1 Timothy 6:1-2 explains how enslaved people should look up to their masters and should show respect towards those who believe in the faith. This citation gives a view into the concept of how slave masters should be the ones who hold the power in the relationship. Titus 2:9-10 also goes more in depth about the concept of a master holding all power by stating that masters should "Urge slaves to be submissive to their masters in everything... showing complete and perfect fidelity." 

        
        There are many more examples in the Bible that encourage the thought and actions of slavery. I find it interesting that the Bible also informs enslaved people that they should proud of their situations. Genesis 24:35 essentially gives off the idea that a slave is a form of wealth and is a blessing. There are many other citations in the testaments that substantially advises people of this idea that slavery is a blessing from God.

ARGUMENTS AGAINST SLAVERY

Reconstruction

In South Carolina, 21 year old male ran into a black church and went on a killing spree killing many innocent lives. During reconstruction b...