Sunday, May 10, 2015

Current Events: May 2015

Source: http://www.cnn.com/2015/05/09/world/global-warming-record-quarter/index.html 

March 2015 is the hottest March globally on record
March 2015 is the hottest March globally
Headline: New temperature records highlight global warming's continued rise

Topic: "Extreme" weather places "reverse" in temperature proving global warming continues

Summary:
  • 2015 is hottest year since 2010
  • Arctic sea ice mileage has decreased significantly
  • Antarctic sea ice mileage has increased significantly
  • Natural ice is disappearing
  • Warming trend reduced water supply in California
  • Northern Hemisphere snow coverage 7th lowest on record
  • More carbon released, higher temps reach causing mega-droughts
  • NASA concludes 80% chance mega-droughts last 20-40 yrs.

Analysis:
It's only May and 2015 has already been called the hottest year on record. With carbon dioxide levels rising with greenhouse gases, Earth won't be relevant anymore. Which means, neither will we. The drought reducing California's water supply has been going on for three years now and NASA concludes it could be another Dust Bowl if it lasts a decade longer. Places that should be cold, like the Arctic, are warming up while the Antarctic gets colder. Earth is our home and the people of this earth are destroying it with their fancy new cars and factories. What I mean is people have gotten lazy and now rely on new technology. Well, some of that new technology increases carbon dioxide. The increase of carbon dioxide levels may be helping us, but its not helping the Earth. As a member of the generation that will occupy this Earth next, this affects my life. The increase of carbon dioxide levels has lead to diseases and respiratory ailments.

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Leading to the Civil War

Together, many events ultimately helped lead up to the Civil War.

The Missouri Compromise
The Missouri Compromise
The Missouri Compromise in 1820 was one of these events. The Missouri Compromise maintained peace and balance between free and slave sates. It admitted Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a free state. It diffused political and sectional rivalries. The Missouri Compromise excluded slavery (except or Missouri) north of latitude 36 degrees 30 minutes.


Wilmot Proviso
The Wilmot Proviso created this.
The Wilmot Proviso also led to the Civil War. It was designed to eliminate slavery in the new lands gained from the Mexican War. A Pennsylvania congressman, David Wilmot, proposed this as an amendment to a bill President Polk was attempting to negotiate. It was blocked by the South but it inflamed the controversy of slavery and its principle. The Wilmot Proviso widened the sectional break and inspired other politicians to form their own plans for slavery.

The Compromise of 1850 additionally helped lead to the Civil War. The Compromise of 1850 resolved the questions and disputes of what to do with the new lands gained from the Mexican-American War. It created the territories of New Mexico, and Utah, admitted California as a free state, settled a Texas-New Mexico border dispute, ended the slave trade in Washington D.C., and amended the Fugitive Slave Law.


uncle toms cabin
The cover of Harriet Beecher Stowe's UncleTom's Cabin.
The Publication of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin 
An author and vocal abolitionist, Harriet Beecher Stowe "wrote the book that made this great war [the Civil War]," according to President Abraham Lincoln. Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin depicts the cruelty of  the slave life attracting public attention, especially from the North. Her novel, praised by Northerners and criticized by Southerners, created uproar and more disputes between the two regions. Her novel, unintentionally, pushed the quarreling regions of the U.S to the breaking point.


Kansas-Nebraska Act
The U.S looked like this after the Kansas-Nebraska Act (orange) was passed.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act was created by Stephen Douglas, Abraham Lincoln's prime presidential competitor. The bill authorized popular sovereignty in the new territories of Kansas and Nebraska and reversed the Missouri Compromise's latitude boundary. Although the bill was passed by Congress, it failed miserably in what it was trying to achieveInstead of organizing western territories and unifying the arguing nation, the Kansas-Nebraska Act split two major political parties and worsened North and South relations.