The movie does take place in a very hot summer in Los Angeles. The Homeland Security has set the threat level of red, which is the highest level in the Homeland Security Advisory System, they're searching for several terrorists related to Islam. In the film, Mustafa is an Egyptian immigrant who runs a Habibi’s Café with his daughter and son, comes to the FBI's attention after a small misunderstanding at the airport and lead them to investigate him. At the same time, he also faced other problems: the first is his young teen son no longer wants to be a Muslim; the second is his sister - Salwah, is a nurse, objects to Mustafa arranging her marriage to a cousin from Egypt. However, she is not interested in him, instead, she interested in a doctor
at her hospital who is not Muslim; the third is Omar, an employee of Mustafa is a struggling actor who doesn't want to play the only terrorist role. Mustafa hopes to open a real restaurant and has a potential partner is Sam, who is Jewish and Egyptian. However, they both encounter resistance from skeptical locals and families and friends regarding common misunderstandings about Arabs and Islamic cultures when they try building a business together.
The film Casablanca centers on an American man by the name of Rick Blaine who flees a German-occupied France during World War II to a city in Morocco by the name of Casablanca. (Casablanca, 1942) This city is a territory of France at the time and is out of full German jurisdiction due to this status. (Casablanca, 1942) Many citizens of German-occupied countries in Europe sought refuge here due to the lack of control Germany had on other countries’ territories early in the war. The general intent of refugees in Casablanca was to flee to even further countries such as The United States of America, which they could not achieve in their home, occupied countries. As the film’s plot develops, the viewer is introduced to refugees very important to the freedom-fighting movement France, and we learn that Rick originated in New York, U.S.A.
The film starts with an uprising after a white storeowner kills a black teenager. This incident Highlights Prejudices. The teenager was labeled a thief because of the color of his skin and the unjustifiable murder causes racial tensions that exist as a result of the integration of the high schools.
HSPD-5 is shortened for Homeland Security Presidential Directive 5. This directive states that the United States should be able to operate under a singular national incident management system. Its’ objectives ensure “… that all levels of government have the capability to work effeciently and effectively together…coordination with private and non-governmental sectors for adequete planning, equipment, training, and exercise activitites and to promote partnerships…the gathering of appropriate information and providing it to the public, the private sector, State and local authorities, Federal departments and agencies…” ( Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, 2003).
Sound was also used to establish the setting. The story takes place in Los Angeles. The big city setting is a characteristic of the genre to which the film and novel belong. Large, urban cities provide a background upon which corruption can flourish because they are a "hotbed of 'dirty crime' and, by association, 'dirty people' " (Ogdon 76). Additionally, in the novel, it is often raining, lighting or thundering. In fact, the novel begins in mid October with "the sun not shining and a look of hard wet rain in the clearness of the foothills" (Chandler 3). While the sound of rain and thunder can be described in the novel, the film adaptation allowed the setting to come to life through the use of images and the sound of thunder in the background and rain falling on the street. This created the gloomy atmosphere found in the hard-boiled detective genre.
The one thing you know for absolute sure about this script, with not much room for interpretation is that it’s hot in Brooklyn when this story takes place. It was clearly a heat wave, and that heat wave spoke volumes as to the current racial climate in the city. A scorching hot city added to the tension the characters were feeling, but Spike did a nice job of letting the tension build throughout this piece. Even at the end of the film when the insanity at Sal’s erupts into a riot scene, you have to be surprised to see it happen. It’s like the characters were living with the oppressive heat of the summer, and you just knew that the heat was a part of life that had to live with. For most of the film, none of the characters shied at all around the subject of race either. It almost made the audience just accept that these charact...
Racial tension and cultural barriers has been a constant within our county and the rest of the world for as long as time has been around. Being segregation, to racial riots and sometimes even worse events can occur which has been proven by history in the past. Director Spike Lee’s 1989 film “Do the Right Thing” is a movie set in New York City neighborhood that is filled with many different cultures and ethnic groups being an Italian pizza shop, an Asian general store, an African American housing and residents. Sociology places a main role within the film in which we see how every person goes about their day. Peace and conflict are at an ever increasing war with each other. Above this the film takes place on only one day which happens to be the hottest day of the summer. The observation that we the audience make out is the highest tension is between the Italians and the African Americans. Granted, there are some that get along but for the most part the conflict is there. Whereas the Asian family in the film is the side group in which they are not shown in many scenes throughout the film. Spike Lee does a phenomenal job in portraying the races the way he see it from his perspective. The neighborhood
The film, Fruitvale Station, is based upon a true story of a young, unarmed African American male, Oscar, who was shot by a Caucasian BART police officer. The film displays the final twenty-fours of Oscar Grant’s lives going through his struggles, triumphs, and eager search to change his life around. There will be an analysis of the sociological aspects displayed throughout the movie that show racism, prejudice, and discrimination.
The general topic for this literature review will be an examination of the Department of Defense and the National Guard in terms of Homeland Security. The areas of Homeland Defense and Civil Support will be primary subsections of Homeland Security which will be reviewed. For purposes of defining a time period none of the literature reviewed will be prior to September 11, 2001. The reasoning for this being to examine Homeland Defense using literature pertaining to 9/11 and the Boston Marathon Bombing, and Civil Support using literature pertaining to Hurricane Katrina.
Explain how the concept of whole community is used at the local level of government to mitigate against risk.
This movie does provoke a dialogue on race that, according to author and journalist Jeff Chang, "has been anathema to Hollywood after 9/11." During the first viewing of
This movie takes place in Los Angeles and is about racial conflicts within a group of people which occur in a series of events. Since there are a wide variety of characters in this movie, it can be confusing to the viewer. In the plot, Graham is an African-American detective whose younger brother is a criminal. His mother cares more about his brother than Graham and she wants Graham to bring his brother back home, which in turn hurts Graham. Graham?s partner Ria is a Hispanic woman who comes to find that her and Graham?s ethnicities conflict when she had sex with him. Rick is the Los Angeles district attorney who is also op...
Over the course of the history of the United States of America, the country has had struggles with its own borders and the protection of those borders. Illegal immigration is a big problem and the smuggling of drugs, weapons, and cash over our borders into our country has evolved into a bigger problem. The United States has over seven-thousand miles of border to cover each day. That is quite a bit of land, but the only problem with this is there is a lack of manpower to cover every single mile of border. The US shares its borders with Canada and Mexico. All along these borders are small communities and cities that are occupied by US citizens. This means that these cities and communities require the protection of our Homeland Security Agency.
Homeland security is the way Americans put forth the effort to ensure the homeland is safe, secure, and stands firm against terrorist acts and other hazard that could put the health and welfare of the American people. The mission of the Homeland Security is to prevent terrorism, secure and protect our open borders, uphold all immigration laws, safeguard and secure cyberspace, and be content and resilient when it pertains to disasters.
National security in the United States is extremely important and requires extensive risk management measures including strategic, exercise, operational and capability-based planning, research, development, and making resource decisions in order to address real-world events, maintain safety, security and resilience (Department of Homeland Security [DHS], 2011). The national security and threat assessment process consists of identifying the risk and establishing an objective, analyzing the relative risks and environment, exploring alternatives and devising a plan of action for risk management, decision making and continued monitoring and surveillance (DHS, 2011). Identifying risks entails establishing a context to define the risk, considering related risks and varying scenarios, including the unlikely ones, which then leads to the analysis phase; gathering data and utilizing various methodologies and analysis data software systems to survey incidence rates, relative risks, prevalence rates, likelihood and probable outcomes (DHS, 2011). These two key phases lay the foundation to explore alternatives and devise action plans. Threats, vulnerabilities and consequences (TCV) are also a key component of many national security risk management assessments because it directly relates to safety and operation capabilities, but the text stress that it should not be included in the framework of every assessment because it is not always applicable (DHS, 2011).
As we could see in the reading resources there are many useful resources for counselors. It is important to remember that no one tool can be effective for all situations. Risk/threat assessment has to be done carefully to respond appropriately to every unique situation. The guide that we read had a lot of good information in it, but again it is only a guide there is no book with all the right answers. This will be the counselor’s judgment call ultimately and training in this area is definitely needed.