Looking for Something?

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Just for the Innocent

We studied the executive branch of government in this unit of Policy. Our class time revolved around the different powers that the President and cabinet members have in government. I went on my own Field Experience to see the mayoral inauguration of Lori Lightfoot, Chicago's first black, female, and openly gay mayor. She is the head of Chicago's smaller scale of an executive branch. All of the new and old aldermen were there to be inaugurated also. I found it energizing to see all of those people in power in the same room and seeing a compassionate group of Chicago residents. I hope to make it to a President's oath of office in my future one day. I think that the mayor has a lot of work to do for the city, but I can't imagine the amount of power the president has over the United States. I find that the power to declare war is a big responsibility. Many wars have been declared in the United States' past. Some wars that we consider to be "real" were not declared by Congress, so the government cannot say those wars were legally entered. The war I decided to study for my Action Project is World War II. I chose this war because I have read non-fiction books of people's perspectives on the Holocaust recently, such as Milkweed by Jerry Spinelli. I had fun researching the history of the war and how it affected the world as a whole, and if it was legal or illegal from the United States' perspective.

Joseph Fornelli, Mission Extraction, Unknown Date
In conclusion, I learned a lot from the process of this Action project. I need to work on being efficient on writing papers and researching. I taught myself how to cite correctly, which is a new and impressive accomplishment. I hope to take the lessons I had from this AP and implement my new research skills on other papers.

Works Cited

Danforth, Bruce. “Why Japan Attacked Pearl Harbor.” Pearl Harbor. Website. https://pearlharbor.org/why-japan-attacked-pearl-harbor/ . Accessed 19 May 2019.

Fornelli, Joseph. "Mission Extraction." National Veterans Art Museum, Chicago. Ink on paper. Accessed 22 May 2019.

Recchiuti, John Louis. “FDR and World War II.” Khan Academy. Website. https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/us-history/rise-to-world-power/us-wwii/a/fdr-and-world-war-ii . Accessed 19 May 2019.

Roosevelt, Franklin D. “Message to Congress.” 1941. PDF. https://fdrlibrary.org/documents/356632/390886/readingcopy.pdf/42234a77-8127-4015-95af-bcf831db311d . Accessed 19 May 2019.

Roosevelt, Franklin D. “Proposed Message to the Congress.” 7 December 1941. PDF File. http://docs.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/images/decwarp1.jpg . Accessed 18 May 2019.

Royde-Smith, John Graham.“World War II.” 23 Aug 1998. Britannica. Website. https://www.britannica.com/event/World-War-II . Accessed 18 May 2019.
United States Constitution. Article I, Section 8, Clause 11. Accessed 20 May 2019.

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. “Franklin Delano Roosevelt”. Holocaust Encyclopedia. Website. https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/franklin-delano-roosevelt . Accessed 19 May 2019.

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. “War Refugee Board: Background and Establishment”. Holocaust Encyclopedia. Website. https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/war-refugee-board-background-and-establishment Accessed 19 May 2019.

No comments:

Post a Comment

One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Dead Fish

In my last term for my STEAM class, I took a course called Frontiers. This term was the first ever time that course was introduced to GCE L...

Popular Posts