Who poses a bigger threat to US: Ben Carson or Ahmed Mohamed?


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Ahmed MohamedA few weeks ago I was watching the news when the story of a fourteen-year-old boy in Irving, Texas, was arrested and interrogated for bringing a homemade clock to school. His name is Ahmed Mohamed.

As I sat watching this story I couldn’t help but think, what if he was white? What if he had a ‘good Christian’ name? What if his pa was a ‘good old boy’ that everyone knew? I thought he wouldn’t have been arrested—he would have possibly gotten a pat on the back and been told what a smart boy he was for building a working clock all on his own. Then I said to myself: that’s just the times we live in now.

It’s easy to look back at things like 9/11 and everywhere there has been monstrous acts of hate committed, and tell ourselves that’s why we react this way to a 14-year old’s science project. The truth is that these acts were committed by extremists with agendas. Not every Muslim is an extremist. What I don’t understand is why we don’t view every Christian with a cautious eye? Always wondering when they are going to blow up their next abortion clinic? The answer is, of course, because not every Christian is an extremist. But for some reason we are not able to see it that way with Muslims.

When Republican presidential primary candidate Ben Carson was asked if he would vote for a Muslim president he said no, because Islam isn’t just a religion, it’s a political-social ideology with strict rules for people, and does not support the separation of church and state. I find that hilarious. In the current presidential campaign there are plenty of religious extremists, all of them Christians, including Ben Carson. The candidates themselves should be forced to place the Constitution before their religions and see how they fare in the campaign without pandering to their constituents about gay marriage and abortion.

In this time of extreme acts I am simply making a point: it’s easy to define one group in its entirety as our enemies, but the reality is that there is evil, ignorance, and stupidity everywhere. I refuse to let those in power dictate to me that their enemies should also be mine.

Your vote doesn’t matter as much as your money


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I VotedDid you know that your voice doesn’t matter? That’s the way it would seem, anyway. All one would have to do to come to that conclusion is keep abreast of what’s going on in politics in our nation today.

Don’t get me wrong, your vote matters. It seems as though these slippery serpents we call politicians will do and say anything to get that vote. However, once they have received your vote, anything they said or promised to you, the voter, that doesn’t coincide with their own agenda is long forgotten. The only things that matter now are fulfilling the promises made to organizations that financed the Golden Road to office.

So now who really has the power? You the voter go to that box on election day so that your voice may be heard. So that the things that matter most to you, your civil rights, your child’s education, health care, protection from criminals and corruption, and the like, are taken care of in a way that gives you comfort. That’s what you give your vote for! The problem is that your voice and your vote are not the same thing.

The organizations that give their money and influence to these politicians’ campaigns—they don’t do it for the sake of democracy. They do it to have their own needs and wants met. Unfortunately for you, the voter, their needs and wants don’t always synch up with your needs and wants. They’re satisfied, meanwhile you, the voter, well, your voice just gets lost.

Justice isn’t blind with data-based sentencing


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The ACI

The ACIUp until July 2014, there was a system in place in determining federal and even some state prison sentences based on data analysis. Simply put, the courts would factor in an individual’s ethnicity, education, socioeconomic background, and even family’s criminal history.

Predictably, this caused non-violent offenders to receive severely harsh prison sentences based on their race, education and even their neighborhood. Such a system groups and generalizes people based on class or race, rather than recognizing the individual for who they are and what truly brought them to the point of crime.

In the federal court system there have been sentences of 25 years, or even life, for distribution of cocaine. The big data system would often deem such sentences as fair because of the statistical probability of the person to re-offend. They receive these extreme sentences for a nonviolent crime because of the possibility of a crime they didn’t commit. That is not justice.

Being both a criminal and a white male from an upper-middle class family, I’ve not experienced this in any sentencing I’ve received. I’ve always been sentenced based on my crime and past criminal history. Not surprisingly, white privilege exists even for criminals. This system is racist in how it functions and is designed to keep the lower class right where they are. Taxpayers who aren’t racists should be livid that even one penny of their money goes to fund such a system.

The very idea that American judges were handing down sentences based on someone’s race and social demographics is frightening. The margin of error is incalculable.

With this program our judicial system seems to be saying that minorities or people from a less advantageous background don’t deserve a second chance as much as someone from a different background? Doesn’t that kind of thinking fly in the fact of the beliefs this nation was built upon? Justice is supposed to be blind.