Student Name
Instructors Name
Course Title
Date
Inequality
Deprotonate exposure of a specific part of the community to inequality may result in various harms to this part of the community. The term inequality is the exposure of specific individuals to unfair treatments; the individuals can range from the community of color, the poor, and any other affected part of the community. The affected parts of the community are always subjected to environmental pollution, concomitant health, unequal environment protection, and unfair treatments as provided in the laws.
Inequality can be considered as the neglecting or subjecting a particular part of a community to unfair treatments. Inequality at times may be the killing of the victims of color or a natural environmental disaster that may come in as a result of negligence. In the book Voice From the Bayou, a clear indication of inequality to the victims of color by the police, and a whole community by the floods is clearly portrayed. The book recaptures that the semester was not a good one because it had begun after many students had lost “their homes due to flooding; most were still reeling from the shootings and the subsequent protests and riots that rocked the capital city.” The student motivated anthology was one that was directed at knowing what the students had felt, and how they had reacted to the situations. It reeled on making a certainty of what the students had witnessed, considering the fact that they had been traumatized by two adjacent effects of inequality. The shootings and the historical floods in the Baton Rouge is one that had left the occupants with very many losses and can be said to have resulted from negligence and victimization of the African Americans. From the book, Professor Clarence explains that the 2016 semester had begun on a very bad note, and the lecturers did not know what to do, this was as a result of “a summer that in Baton Rouge had seen the murders of Alton Sterling and innocent police officers.” The book elaborates that the victims had faced their deaths as a result of their color. This is a clear example of inequality in society. And as a result, a riot had broken out in the city, with individuals protesting on the unjust treatments of the victims. From this summary, it is very obvious that inequality may affect the community in many ways, leading to destructions of properties and many other issues.
The degree of inclusion or exclusion in a social welfare policy affects the community response greatly. The inclusion or exclusion of a community in a social welfare program like the food stamp program generally determines equality or inequality in a social setting. As a result, the way a community perceives that they are included or excluded in a general setting will determine their level of participation in the communal activities. Plutzer Erick, in his writing, “empirically test the notion that the degree of inclusion/exclusion of social welfare policies can have important feedback effects on political participation of poor citizens.” He elaborates that the Food stamp program is a program that was meant all the poor families in the USA. However, some states were not able to reach the donations. He indicates that the poor are a clear example of victims of inequality. In many ways, the food is mentored at ensuring that the poverty-stricken families get a chance like all the other families. However, the inability to get the Aid as the law elaborates means that the government has generally exercised an inequality to them according to what the law provides. In the commercial, Erick elaborates that the inclusion or exclusion in the “program “sends a message” to potential recipients about their worth in the community; these messages may encourage or discourage participation.” This is to show that in not being able to get Aid’s as all the other parts of the country, the affected individual is likely to exercise miss-participation. Moreover, it is very clear from Erick’s findings that the exclusion is there, and it determines the voting graphs in elections. It is, therefore, very clear that the inclusions or exclusions are causes of major defects of how a state may respond to the government (Plutzer, 2010).
The media presentation of cultures comes in handy in dictating the views that individuals have over others. In the production of play and movies, specific parts of the community can either be portrayed as wrong or right, and this is even affected by the news streams. In his research, Jarrod establishes, in “Potter series a set of contradictory discourses related to class and consumerism.” The class that a commercial may bring out changes the views that individuals have over the individuals in the commercials. Moreover, commercials are used and consumed by many individuals in the society. This, therefore, elaborates that the commercials that portray some sorts of inequality reach and affect a very large population of viewers. This, therefore, necessitates the question, how does this affect the community? “The role such corporate activations might play in the struggle over how commodity production and consumption will be understood in the wider social field.” This acts as Jarrod’s thesis statement, as he tries to investigate the effects that a cooperate may play in a community setting. According to Jarrod, the community is built to respond to many things in many ways. This is also attributed to the response that a mind gets in different situations. And therefore, based on the ideology that an individual gets, he or she can respond or react to the environment in that context. This, therefore, means that cooperates may influence the co-relation; they are attributed to acts of inequality (Waetjen, 2007).
In sum, inequality affected parts of the community are always subjected to environmental pollution, concomitant health, unequal environment protection, and unfair treatments as provided in the laws. These trends may come in as a result of poor response to Natural calamities like floods, and racial discrimination like exclusion, exclusions in social welfares, and the cooperate activations of inequalities in the media. In all the cases, the aftermath of the events dictates great losses, from trauma, property destructions to shying away from government activities. The effects of inequality as seen cause extreme damages, and as a result, inequality acts should be avoided at all costs.