Monday, February 24, 2014

Week 8 Comprehensive Assignment

After reviewing my work for this course, especially my first few assignments, it becomes evident that I am cynical as I do not trust large governmental entities. In actuality, it would be appropriate to say that I do not respond well to any authority. Additionally, it is evident that I am a socially conservative individual, looking at my last comprehensive assignment. My satire towards the purposefulness of gay marriages clearly indicates my conservative nature. This nature is mirrored in my fiscal and political leanings. I am very against the continuation of our national deficit and the accumulation of a national debt.

Friday, February 21, 2014

Unit 6 Blog

After reading a piece of gun legislation, I was pleasantly surprised by the fact that I did not disagree with what the content of the legislation. The Bills were about a reform and improvement of the functionality of the National Instant Criminal Backgorund Check System. This bill was only about improving functionality, and not about increasing the control of the government. After emailing both my senators and members of the House, I never recieved a reply, which makes me wonder if they actually read the correspondences. I will continue to practice my duty as a responsible, informed citizen and provide my input to the men and women that we elect.


Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Unit 7

This cartoon points out the inability of homosexual marriages to further the human race through procreation. People of the same gender cannot consent to sexual acts with one another and expect to reproduce children.

It should be noted that there is a rainbow color theme in this cartoon, a door hanger that warns "Do Not Enter", and that these two men are on their honeymoon. The "Do Not Enter" hanger indicates homosexual marriage should not be entered into as it is in a taboo area.

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Week 5 Comprehensive Assignment

Week 5 Comprehensive Assignment

I look at the list
I realize I'll swing and miss
Is there even a point?

I hit submit
where does it even go?
Does anyone actually know?

Ive heard the electoral college
But of this I have no knowledge
Who picks the professors?
Who submits my work?

It is said that electors give the electoral votes
But the people do not elect the electors
so who knows that I even help elect who I select

 should i just give up
there was no point in me leaving my house
i should have just stayed at home knowing i was a louse.


This poem explores a voter's curiosity into the American Electoral College and the defeat that the voter feels when an answer cannot be derived. The poem asks questions that point toward tyrannical ideas voters try not to contemplate for long, as the answers can easily depress the voters. I exhibit this in the poem both through what I say and through the grammatical conventions that I employ. I begin to stop capitalizing the first word of every line, which is a habit that I see as being lazy or communicating, "I don't care." Additionally, I stop using punctuation at the end of the sentences or in conjunctions. It is not until I feel truly defeated at the end of the poem that I employ a period, which indicates that I am forever done with voting in the political system as I do not believe there is a point in me continuing to vote.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Week 3


My political cartoons represent the political leanings that a great deal of research has resulted in. For years I have been studying history and developing my stance on government and forming an ideology concerning economic systems. The Pew Typology is very accurate in that I am certainly a staunch conservative. I feel that government is often inefficient and wrong in the decisions that it makes. This is evident in the anti-federalist cartoons that I composed earlier in the semester. I pointed out the tyranny that can come from governmental authorities and the inefficiencies of a bureaucracy. I will continue to do so in my future work so that I can continue to build my understanding of how historical political situations relate to current political occurrences.

Week 2 Cartoon


This cartoon shows a government employee standing on the American Bill of Rights. Behind the soldier is a pile of weapons (including knives, pistols and rifles) along with books. The idea that knowledge is power encourages the citizens of the American government to increase the value that is placed on books and the freedom that they foster. The government employee is trampling the rights of the American people and taking their freedom to communicate thoughts (1st Amendment) as well as their ability to protect themselves through the right to bear arms (2nd Amendment). The citizen is kneeling on the fireplace in his own home, indicating that the government has invaded his right to privacy (a mix of the 3rd and 4th Amendments). The person is begging for the recognition of his rights, but the government is about to stomp down on those rights, as indicated by the looming boot of a soldier over the citizen. The idea that the books and weapons will be forcibly taken from the home is affirmed because the government employee has a rifle around his back.  Additionally, the rifle around the government employee’s back indicates the brutal subjugation that will come after the peaceful citizens (those who hope for the best from their government) have been removed from any potential conflict. This cartoon represents a very real possibility in that our government faces daily debates that will either lead to an increased amount of governmental power or continued freedoms for the people.

Week 1 Comprehensive Assignment


This cartoon depicts an anti-federalists outlook regarding the public with relation to leaders in a federalist system. Anti-federalists believe that a federal system takes too much power from the states and the common man. In a federalist system, the leader may intentionally or accidentally establish himself as the leader for longer than is wise (like FDR). When this occurs, that person may begin to accumulate powers that he should not have, like in the French monarchial system under Louis XIV. The idea is expressed in this cartoon by giving the figure in the carton a halo of fire, mimicking portraits of Louis XIV, the Sun King. The people, like slaves, are subjected to the rule of the leader, depicted by the most obvious part of the image. The people are bowing at the feet of the leader, just as slaves and worshippers do. The ambiguous figure being worshipped in the picture does not have a face in order to depict that the voting populace would not truly know who he is. The voters who are worshipping the figure have walking canes and ballots written in brail. The braille on the ballots translates to “Federalist” & “Anti-Federalist”. The blind voters selected the Federalists to lead the country. This depicts the idea that voters are blind to what really occurs in a bureaucracy. The cartoon is pointed toward the Federalist voters, in hopes to make them realize what a strong centralized government could mean for the country.