Article 11

Trump Camp’s Talk of Registry and Japanese Internment Raises Muslim Fears
New York Times
Jonah Engel Bromwich 17 November 2016

Who: Carl Higbie
What: Muslim registry
Where: America
When: Trump’s presidency
Why: protect America from Muslim threat

With Donald Trump being elected, the possibility of Muslim registations have become possible. Carl Higbie was a Great America PAC spokesman who referred to Kris Kobach’s suggestion that they make a Muslim registry. The controversy over the topic spread rapidly with many groups pointing to the relevance the suggestion has to the Japanese interment camps, and even as far as Nazi Germany with Jews. Mr. Although Mr. Higbie is not connected to the party official, many give reason to doubt the policy Mr. Kobach as discriminatory. The policy was pasted in 2002, but only lasted a year before wide spread criticism make the law repealed.

My opinion is with the activist groups in that a registry would be discriminate to people coming to the United States, which goes against the First Amendment and more.
I learned that people within Trump’s circle are some of the less liked politicians who never got their laws passed for all being unconstitutional.
This information effects the Muslims immigrating to this country, along with the Muslims in the country also.

How is this different than the Japanese interment camps?
How will this work?
Does Trump support this himself?

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/18

AP Biology Stop Motion

1. These systems are similar because they both have a receptor protein on the outside of the cellular membrane that starts the signal transduction pathway. Also, both use phosphate groups to activate proteins in the pathway.
2. The two are different as G-protein receptor systems use a protein to move the signal along. The tyrosine kinase receptor system uses kinase to give many proteins a phosphate group to activate them. This boosts the signal faster in the tyrosine kinase system over the G-protein.
3. Amplification occurs when one activated protein, signals another two proteins to activate, which those then both activate another two proteins, and so on and so forth, amplifying the signal.
a. I would look for a receptor that can bond with a variety of what can signal it, along with the receptors each having a different variety.
b. Dogs may have may more receptors than humans so they have a higher chance to receive a signal.

Democracy in Action 1st Quarter

Zack VZ
Ms. Keener
AP Government
11 November 2016
Democracy in Action 1st Quarter
Reluctantly, I went to a court hearing over this quarter, and learned about the judicial system. The event was a hearing I was in for a ticket given after an accident on the highway, in which the man in front of me stopped abruptly on the highway. To the hearing again, I was told my rights and my obligations, what I could ask for and what my choices were and consequences for them. The judge described each and made sure I understood what I was being told. She then also made sure I had time to talk with my parents about the choices and for us to all agree. Eventually she gave me her decision on what was going to happen with me, made sure I understood, and a final signature to prove I agreed.
This event shows a great deal into our governmental system. The judge was of importance in our government as a branch of the judicial branch. This particular event was with the local government as it was not a state or federal judge, but a county court that I had to attend. I learned that some courts care about the individual and their sense of privacy, from how my family was in a room with only the judge, so that others could not listen to our discussion over the charges. This event tells how the justice system in America works with small cases on a local scale, and how individuals are processed and fairly tried if they wish.