Monday, December 2, 2019

Racism And Prejudice Essays - Discrimination, Hatred, Racism, Gone

Racism And Prejudice In my eight grade at Earl warren, I witnessed numerous amounts of prejudice and racism. Not saying names about certain specific people but this said designated person is a female. I've known this girl since about the 2nd or 3rd grade so I know about her school life well enough to be able to tell this story. To my knowledge, I feel she grew up, at school, with a pleasant life as a young girl. She wasn't really known to be one of the prettiest girls, but I guess she could be considered a little sweet heart. As the years progressed, we already hit the fourth grade at Skyline Elementary School. School started off as a new-sprung and fresh start for her little life. Even though there was more to come in her new days, there was probably more that she would encounter that she would've ever expected. It kills me to still think about this, but older people in the 6th grade had already been introduced to smoking and drinking. This once pleasant girl had a rendezvous with her new coming future. As known to this day adolescent minds should not come to face with such horrors. She started to hang out with the older more mature kids a mature kids, how had better experience with the subject, which had caused her young, innocent mind to be penetrated beyond its boundaries to a new step in her life. While, the months and years proceeded by in a normal fashion her way of life confronted a huge U-turn. For instance, she started to dress in a gothic manner of wearing all dark and gloomy colors as if you changed into a totally different person. This came to conclude with major prejudices from our fellow classmates. I know how people thought in 5th and 6th grade and to people in that degree of age that was thought to be really weird. Kids just thought that because she wore constant black and glum colors that she was scary and dumb. I don't know what anyone else thinks, but saying someone is scary, mean, weird, and just not cool or normal just because the way the dress I think that leans toward being prejudice. These peculiar thoughts toward her continued throughout her elementary school years. She finally hit the 7th grade and once again she became involved with the older students, but for some reason know that she was hanging out with older people she was considered to be cool and popular. She stopped dressing the way she had before for a reason UN apparent to she and myself just came to be one of the most popular girls in our school. Other girls even started to act the way as the ways as she did. Through out the year she wasn't known to be one of the nicest girls she was actually kind of mean towards certain people. Finally the big 8th grade hit and since there were no older people to hang out with she finally decided to hang with people in her own grade. Through this period of time the drug abuse did not stop and neither did the drinking prospect. That year I was in her 8th grade English with her, designated in the seat right across from her. From undergoing her personal aspect I learned a surplus of knowledge of how she felt about different races of people. I don't know how she got this prejudice feeling toward this race of people, but she had a thing against Asians. She would call them chinks and other derogatory names and her reply to this consumption is that they should go back to their own countries. Seriously I really thought of that thought to be an appalling opinion coming from no reason once so ever. I think that she has gone through a bad life of prejudges and hate towards her and she back fired on it by using it as a scapegoat to blame all of her problems and past problems on this certain race. Or this could be just because she is really prejudiced and racist, or it could have been problems at home. But what I don't get, is why after her elementary school years of prejudicism toward her and hatred and commenting behind her back. That she would come back later in her life and judge a race from the way the look and act and just the way they are for hardly a good reason.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.