The poor people who reside in these types of places tend to foster an anger that becomes hatred in their lives. One of the photos surrounding Gray's death shows two young boys looking on in bewilderment at the protest. The image shows the faces of a boy holding a protest poster. The image highlights how the boy's eyes seem filled with hatred because his innocent is no longer with him. This kind of images makes people in the society who have a child in this business can influence their behavior because this kid can be a potential criminal in the future because he doesn't understand how the society is. Baldwin in his article "Notes of a Native Son" states that the people of Baltimore are justified in protesting because they are not treated as human by society. Baldwin may agree with the people of Baltimore in pointing out that people labeled in society show the inequality experienced by minorities such as blacks. Baldwin might agree with the people of the protest because this type of humiliation creates hatred towards others in people's lives. Baldwin states: “But this did not mean that one could be satisfied, because the second idea was of equality of power: that one should never, in one's life, accept these injustices as trivial but must fight them with all one's strength. This, however, begins in the heart, and I have now been entrusted with the task of keeping my heart free from hatred and despair” (604). Baldwin says that in his experience it changes his future and the label he has for the color of his sink. Baldwin agrees with the idea that the minority suffers prejudice from society. Baldwin supports the idea that society likes to trap the minority as people in a category devoid of opportunity. Dorothy Allison, in her article "A Question of Class", helps to understand why people in society
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