The extremely white and extremely wealthy Super Vanilla Cream Boi was walking down Cookie Dough Cheesecake Avenue of Cloud Land on a bright summer day. Cloud Land was a very diverse town, and it was split down the middle by this street, Cookie Dough Cheesecake Avenue. Cloud Land had a very rich part of town where everyone, including the white-suit adoring, orange-haired Super Vanilla Cream Boi, drove fancy cars such as shiny, red Lamborghinis or creamy, white Rolls Royces’ and lived in fancy white houses with gold trim flowing around the edges of the walls.
The other side of town was where the extremely dark Yung Cookie Thugs lived. They wore tattered clothes and never showered. Their hair was a shiny, greasy brown color and home to many parasites
…show more content…
They started scheming up a plan to take back their cookie shooters and steal some of Super Vanilla Cream Boi’s money as well. The Yung Cookie Thugs knew that Super Vanilla Cream Boi was weak and that they could jump him in a secluded alley on Cookie Dough Cheesecake Avenue, the gateway between the two diverse sides of the city. Super Vanilla Cream Boi had recently gotten a membership at Jock Dude’s Physical Fitness Gym, on the upper west side. He was working every day to get stronger because he had figured out that the Yung Cookie Thugs were coming after him. Super Vanilla Cream Boi dreaded going back to Cookie Dough Cheesecake Avenue but he had to meet with his stock adviser, M&M Boy. Super Vanilla Cream Boi never reached the stock adviser’s office, because the Yung Cookie Thugs were waiting for him as soon as he hopped out of his Porsche covered in gold and …show more content…
The trapdoor was only big enough for one person to go at a time, but all 3 of them were greedy so they all tried to go at once. When they tried to do that, there was a chemical reaction and they all got stuck together. The big, fat Super Vanilla Cream Boi was in the middle and the Yung Cookie Thugs were pushing on him from both sides. They flattened Super Vanilla Cream Boi and they were basically a sandwich. Then, when they went all the way through the trapdoor, the combination of the 3 characters looked like they had gone through a cookie cutter. They fell and fell until they hit something very hard. It was the ground, and they started crying. Then a big, old fellow with breath that smelled like garlic cheese picked up the cookie that they had become. He had a great idea just then, he would mass produce the cookies! But then his train of thought was interrupted by Super Vanilla Cream Boi, who said, “What are thoseee?!” The man was wearing teal Crocs. He got very annoyed with the obnoxious cookie and he stuffed it in his burgundy dress sock. The man then went to a factory called Nabisco. He knocked on the door quickly and said, “I have a great new idea,” as he pulled the cookie out of his sock. And as you may know, the rest is
In chapter 2 the first way they were dehumanized they were shoved into cattle cars. When they were in them they starved because they had little to no food. They also suffered from heat exhaustion because it was summer during this. They also had no room to move at all. The cattle cars were overcrowded with people.
In 1989, the supreme court ruled in Graham vs Connor, a case in which the court held that excessive force claims, in an investigatory stop or arrest, should be analyzed under the Fourth Amendment. The case began when Dethorne Graham, a diabetic black man, filed a case in the District Court under 42 U.S.C. 1983 against respondents in which excessive use of force was used on him and violated his Fourth Amendment right. Graham went to a quick run to the store for insulin when he sensed an onset of one of his diabetic episodes. Graham, along with his friend Berry, went in to purchase some orange juice, however, he saw a long line ahead of him and decided to leave in hope to find another store.
Mrs. Mattaman, Moose’s friends mom, baked Natalie her favorite cake as a special surprise for her. Natalie wanted the cake but Moose and Mrs. Mattaman wanted to teach her something first. Natalie could only focus on the cake, and very soon, she pitched a huge fit, causing Mrs. Mattaman to not want to give the cake to Natalie. Moose tried to drag Natalie about of there but Natalie unlovingly bit her brother on the hand. Moose screamed and said, “You know Natalie?
They were put under the deck and became sick and where not able to eat because of the stench. They were chained
My final and third reason is the bad weather and poor living conditions. There was always cold weather and never a bright sunshine, you never had good clothes to keep you warm for the weather many people didn 't even have shoes. They said some people when they walked around in the snow, barefoot their feet cracked and there were bloody footprints everywhere. They didn 't have the best quartering either all they had was a simple, tiny, log cabin with no air conditioner or ventilation. It was always smoky like in them and probably as cold as it was outside.
Nearly any clothing was on them. The women had binder like tops and skirts and men only had pants. No shirts. Also the men, women, and children were very skinny.
They were pretty much owned by Adolf Hitler and were under his control. They had no say so. Some died as soon as they got there, beaten, or worked to death. They also ate horrible food that wasn’t beneficial to them. For example, in Night they had to run in the freezing cold and couldn’t stop or slow down or they would be shot.
Sanitation was a problem in homes and public places. Many women lived in tenement houses and for this reason, women had difficulty cleaning and caring for the house. (Doc C) Basements were damp, stairways certainly weren’t fireproof, and finding untainted food was a large issue for people who lived in tenements. (Doc C) Factories were also filthy. Meat factories had meat falling onto the floor onto dirt and sawdust.
Lastly, in The Raisin in the Sun, the family moves into a white neighborhood despite neighbors thoughts. We learn that it is not comfortable and not fair to
Sanyika Shakur tells his life story in detail in his book, Monster: The Autobiography of an L.A. Gang Member. He tells how he lived from a very young age and survived the gang life in South Central L.A. during the 1960’s and 1970’s, which was during the startup of the Crips. He was born Kody Scott and he was born into a very poor family. He had an absent father and was therefore raised by a single mother. At the very young age of eleven Kody Scott turned his life over to the Crips.
There housing, clothing, and food. The housing was usually a wood cabin that wasn’t built very good. It usually didn’t actually provide shelter and many people died from bad weather or even animal attacks. Some house workers got to live in the main house if they were lucky. The clothing was handed out once a year and were usually very old and worn.
Their lives described in nature as poor, solitary, nasty and short.
All American Boys Writing Prompt #3 In today’s media racial injustice is still occurring today because there’s people who are treated differently bias on their race. In the novel “All American Boys” by Jasyn Reynolds and Brendan Kiely tells how Rashad was accused of stealing a bag of chips at the store called Jerry’s. The police officer beat Rashad just because he was resisting arrest but he wasn’t.
They were smart all together. Darker people where no creatures like people said they were. Every person will forever be human. Some could vote and some could not. People would randomly be beat in a restaurant just for being happy, and some people were the ones beating and hurting the others.
But the youths do not just enjoy the milk for its stimulating effects or its taste; they enjoy it for an escape from reality, from morality, from self (Davis). Feeling angst from living in such a dull and oppressive world, Alex and his gang take refuge in artificial stimulation as a source of fulfillment, and accept alterations to their mental states as a cure for monotony. But as a consequence of intentionally warping their morality and perception of the world and their lack of experience as responsible adults, Alex and his gang often fail to fully grasp the consequences of their violent actions (Davis).