Each time a police officer chooses to make an arrest, they demonstrate whether or not they practice the proper discretion that their career field expects of them. For the particular case involving Ken Krook, a young man who had attempted to rob a liquor store, while holding the store clerk at gun point. While Ken fled the scene, a responding officer had been notified on behalf of the specific crime that had taken place following a veg description of the individual. After noticing an individual who seemed to fit the description of Ken Kook, the officer ran after the criminal, eventually making an arrest. This case brings up the issue involving what is and is not a proper use of discretion, and whether the arrest of Ken Krook was done lawfully.…
time to get there before anyone realized what had happened. also oswalds behavior the day of the shooting is perfectly consistent with him being the shooter and…
Franklin Delano Roosevelt book by Alan Brinkley is considered to be a brilliant biography of America’s thirty-second President. As he himself noted, “No president since the nation’s founding has done more to shape the character of American government” (p. 62). Indeed, the main aim of this short biography is to highlight Roosevelt’s greatness and guile that to most went unnoticed. As Brinkley claimed and most scholars agree, “No president since Lincoln has served through darker or more difficult times,” Roosevelt is recognized as a resilient President that led the country through the worst economic crisis in history (p. 98). In addition, Brinkley aims to provide a concise, but vivid narrative of Roosevelt’s character and notable achievements,…
Bibliography: "Lyndon Johnson and the Great Society" by John A. Andrew"The Politics of John F. Kennedy" by Edmund S. Ionshttp://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/database/article_display.cfm?HHID=372www.schoolhistory.co.uk/ lessons/usa194180/new_frontier.shtml…
How significant was Lyndon B Johnson in improving civil rights for African-Americans during his presidency (1963-69)?…
Many people were talking about civil rights. Lyndon Baines Johnson was born in Stonewall, Texas, on August 27, 1908. At the age of twenty he taught at a segregated Mexican- American school in Cotulla, Texas. In 1931 Johnson moved to Washington, D.C.where he worked as a congressional aide. In 1937 he won the Texas seat in the house of representative. In 1948 Johnson was elected as a senator for Texas. Six years later in 1954 he became a majority leader in the senate. During his senate years Johnson did not support federal civil rights laws. He believed that it was the job of the states to deal with the civil rights issue. However in 1957 Johnson did support a federal law on voting rights but it was watered down. In 1960 Johnson became the vice president under John F. Kennedy. Three years later Kennedy was killed and Johnson became the president of the united states. When Kennedy died a meaningful civil rights bills was struggling to get through congress. After Johnson got behind the bill it was a sure thing. On July 2, 1964 he signed the civil rights act. The bill expanded voting rights, strengthened equal employment opportunity, and guaranteed all Americans the Right to use public facilities. Why did Johnson sign the civil rights act, for personal gain or out of principal.…
After President Lincoln’s assassination, his Vice-President took over and kept a very similar plan for reconstruction. President Johnson was a democrat that was not liked by congress because of his inability to make important decision on laws and amendments. He believed states right and thought it was the white men of the South’s job to reestablish government. Congress had to overwrite veto after veto that Johnson’s weak policies’ did not accept. His refusal to punish the South and force them to enter blacks in their societies brought the congress to an attempt of impeachment that failed.…
Many people were talking about civil rights. Lyndon Baines Johnson was born in Stonewall, Texas, on August 27, 1908. At the age of twenty he taught at a segregated Mexican- American school in Cotulla, Texas. In 1931 Johnson moved to Washington, D.C.where he worked as a congressional aide. In 1937 he won the Texas seat in the house of representative. In 1948 Johnson was elected as a senator for Texas. Six years later in 1954 he became a majority leader in the senate. During his senate years Johnson did not support federal civil rights laws. He believed that it was the job of the states to deal with the civil rights issue. However in 1957 Johnson did support a federal law on voting rights but it was watered down. In 1960 Johnson became the vice president under John F. Kennedy. Three years later Kennedy was killed and Johnson became the president of the united states. When Kennedy died a meaningful civil rights bills was struggling to get through congress. After Johnson got behind the bill it was a sure thing. On July 2, 1964 he signed the civil rights act. The bill expanded voting rights, strengthened equal employment opportunity, and guaranteed all Americans the Right to use public facilities. Why did Johnson sign the civil rights act for personal gain or out of principal.…
If you’re wondering how Lyndon B. Johnson had so many people on his side, there’s one simple way to put it. Retail Politics! This is when a particular person would go out personally to local events and meet individual voters one-to-one to learn their situations and political views and use that to their strategy. When it came to winning, LBJ had the patience and the humility to work with one person at a time. Craig Raupe states, “JFK would call five or six, LBJ would take nineteen names and call them all.” So, while John called his five or six friends of unwavering opinions, knowing no matter what they would always be on his side. Lyndon would gather all his steady voters with his hesitant voters for a better chance at gaining more by increasing the chance of having those extra voters that might just say “yes.”…
Andrew Johnson was appointed to a tailor shop where he fell in love with a local girl. Her parents turned him away due to him being poor. He then left South Carolina and began his journey in Tennessee. He met his wife, who did not teach him to read but did educate him. He began investing in real estate and eventually became slightly wealthy and owned a few slaves. In 1829, he started his first step in politics by becoming a member of a local council, also known as an alderman.…
President Lyndon B. Johnson launched the Great Society which is a set of domestic programs in 1964–65. The main goal of this domestic program was the elimination of poverty and racial injustice. In 1965, Democratic majorities in the 89th Congress passed eighty of eighty-three major legislative proposals: an unparalleled record. By 1969, nearly all of Johnson's Great Society reform legislation had become law. Such program made footsteps on domestic program today including Obama Care. Great Society covered aid to education, attack on disease, Medicare, urban renewal, conservation, development of depressed regions, a wide-scale fight against poverty, control and prevention of crime and delinquency, and the removal of obstacles to the right to…
When in a meeting with Senator Richard Russell, Russell mentioned that if he continues with the Civil Rights Act then it was going to cost him the South and the election. Johnson did not mind; he was willing to pay the price if it meant that the bill was going to get passed. Johnson wanted this for a long time, he just didn't have the power and the freedom to do it yet. L.B.J had a change of heart, he was just waiting for the right moment to put it in action.…
Johnson was elected to become a member of Congress in 1933. Later in 1948 Johnson became the youngest member of the Senate. Johnson became a majority leader of the Senate in 1949.…
Who was Lyndon B. Johnson? Well, Johnson said the following while describing him, “I am a free man, an American, a United States Senator, and a Democrat, in that order. I am also a liberal, a conservative, a Texan, a taxpayer, a rancher, a businessman, a consumer, a parent, a voter, and not as young as I used to be nor as old as I expect to be—and I am all of these things in no fixed order.” Lyndon Baines Johnson was the thirty-sixth president of the United States, serving from 1963 to 1969. He took office on November 22, 1963, after John F. Kennedy was martyred in Dallas. Johnson's administration was marked by landmark reform laws and welfare programs, yet political support for him collapsed because of his escalation of the Vietnam War.…
Lyndon B. Johnson’s presidential reign began with the assassination of former president John F. Kennedy in 1963. While the people of the United States tried to recover from the loss of Kennedy, Johnson used it to his advantage. Many citizens did not notice that this was being done, and some even wonder if Johnson himself knew he was using it to his advantage. By him telling America that Kennedy would have wanted the Great Society, the people believed him and went through with it. Many things, both good an bad came out of the Great Society. The Great Society was Johnson’s way of fixing the problems in America, that being the political, emotional and mostly the social problems.…