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History repeats itself

            As tensions mount in Hong Kong, riot police have gotten more and more aggressive against protestors pushing for their freedom, but today that was even further escalated when a Hong Kong policeman shot a citizen of Hong Kong peacefully protesting on Monday. This is the third time that this has happened since the protests began, making tensions even higher as protestors push for their deserved freedoms in the face of this danger.           The 21 year old protestors was shot in the stomach, he was unarmed and nonviolent when 3 shots were fired and 1 connected directly with his abdomen, sending him to the closest hospital in critical condition, which he remains in as of this posting, you can check for updates on his condition  here . Do you think that the Hong Kong protestors are using an effective strategy to get their demands met? Is there anything you would change to how they protest to help them better achieve their freedoms?        
Recent posts

How could something like this even happen?

          Could you ever imagine having someone murder someone close to you and then completely get away without consequence? As unimaginable a situation that might seem, it unfortunately happened in August, when Anne Sacoolas, the wife of a US intelligence officer, hit and killed 19 year old Harry Dunn while driving on the wrong side of the road in Britain. Mrs. Sacoolas quickly claimed diplomatic immunity and fled back to the US, causing quite the commotion, as she escaped the situation without any legal consequence.            Now could you picture even further, the President of the United States deciding that she won’t be sent back to the UK to face consequences for the grisly murder she committed? Well that’s exactly what happened today when it was revealed in Trump’s press release notes,  which you can read right here , declared that in the event it was brought up, he would reveal that there were absolutely no plans to send Mrs. Sacoolas back to face justice, a move that has put

Opening a window into the past with Douglass’ writing

     Ethos, pathos, and logos are often used throughout a piece of writing to appeal to the reader in various ways, whether its using pathos to emotionally draw the reader in, ethos to appeal to the audience via the author’s character, or logos to appeal to the logical side of the audience. Pathos is often used by Frederick Douglass in his writing to try and include the reader in the story on an emotional level, discussing all his hardships and day to day experiences so that they can attempt to just slightly better comprehend the hellish day to day world he lived in. Pathos is used heavily especially in chapter 2, when Douglass is describing his life as a slave on a plantation, and dealing with being treated as if they were livestock; this scene best illustrates this as Douglass discusses the sleeping situation on the plantation, “...on one common bed, - the cold, damp floor, - each covering himself or herself in their miserable blankets; and here they sleep till they are summoned to

My Family and its History

      I hadn’t done much research into my family origins or what my name meant until this interview, but I’ve found that there’s a lot I hadn’t known. I was born Henry Hutter Gilson, a pretty simple sounding first, middle, and last name, but I’ve come to find that it’s not as simple as it looks. My first name was chosen by my parents, who wanted me to have a name that was easy to pronounce and understand, while still being more unique and interesting to say. My middle name is my mother’s maiden name, something I had known for a while. My last name is Luxembourgian, one side of my family immigrated to American from Luxembourg, the other side from Sweden, and we all ended up in Chicago purely by chance.        My family identifies as White, we don’t really celebrate and Swedish or Luxembourgian traditions, although some of them do seem pretty cool, like Bretzelsonndag, a tradition in which a man offers a woman a pretzel as a token of his love on the Sunday of Bretzelsonndag, and if she