Monday, December 15, 2014

US History- First Semester Summary Activity

Lucy Lastovic
December 16, 2014
US History-H Block
Speech

From watching historically based films like "Glory" and "12 Years a Slave", to researching how Native Americans are genetically predisposed to obesity and diabetes, I have been presently surprised by the copious amounts of different topics we have learned this semester. Seeing as I want to go into the medical field, I was very interested in my research topic about what marker or gene causes Native Americans to be susceptible to obesity and diabetes. For thousands of years, communities and populations that relied on farming, hunting, and fishing for food experience a great fluctuation of alternation periods in which they endured feast and famine. For their bodies to adapt to these extreme changes in caloric needs, their bodies developed a "Thrifty Gene" that allowed them to store fat during times of plenty so that they would not starve during times of famine. While this gene was extremely helpful in times of famine, these populations have now adopted to the “typical” western lifestyle. Meaning, they endure less physical activity due to automobiles, consumption of a high-fat diet, and access to a constant supply of calories. This Thrifty Gene has begun to work against these communities, continuing to store calories in preparation for famine, causing their high susceptibility of diabetes and obesity. So I was pleasantly surprised to discover that by understanding the biology of things like genes, I can get a better insight to American history as a whole.
Having a minimal history in the rise of the industrial workforce and the people that worked in it, I was unpleasantly surprised by the how the children were treated. At least 1.7 million children under the age of 16 years old were employed in factories and fields. Only 38 state legislatures had passed child labor laws in the late 19th century. Agriculturally employed children worked 12 hour days in the field, and these children were often exempt from the laws. For factory working children, they had to be at least 12 years old and would work a minimum of 10 hours a day. These children were being maimed and even killed in industrial accidents at an alarming rate. Knowing that children were being so poorly mistreated and manipulated by adults just so they could pay cheaper wages is truly sickening.
10 years down the road, I will be able to remember and discuss the effects of Social Darwinism during the Industrial supremacy. More importantly, I will be able to remember Herbert Spencer’s argument in which he states that society benefited from the elimination of the unfit and survival of the strong and talented.
Racism has been an issue that Americans in the past and present have struggled with. 149 years after slavery was abolished, and all men and women of different skin color became equals, we are still having catastrophic issues with racism. Take Michael Brown for example, an 18 year old African-American male who was shot and killed by a white police officer. Everyone jumped to the conclusion that he was shot because he was black, but no one stopped to listen to the fact that he had just tried to rob a store and then physically assaulted the officer, resulting with Brown turning the gun back on the officer. It was self defense, but people who did not even witness the crime, immediately jumped to the conclusion that it was about race.
Looking back at what we have learned in history this past semester from 1865 to 1920, there is a common theme of growth and expansion throughout America. Whether it’s political or technological, America went through a major transformation during this era. Therefore, I would name this era the Age of American Expansion because we have talked about all forms of expansion throughout America. Anywhere from expansion of populations across the nation or the spread of industrial factories, America went through a significant period of growth during this era.