Stepping off the boat, you are optimistic and filled with awe as you stare at the towering skyscrapers, speeding automobiles, and mass crowds of people, and as the fresh new smells of the modern city fill your nostrils, how can you not help but think, this really is the land of opportunities (“City Life”). This is the illusion each immigrant experienced until they too joined the mass of impoverished, and this is the illusion that begins to erode as your awe fades and your optimism ceases to cloud your senses. The smells are not fresh. They are of must and rot. The crowds are massive, but each person is caked in grime and bustling towards the nearest bar. The skyscrapers, well their sights are covered by the rows of apartments connected to each other by laundry lines and the wretched smells that seep from their crevasses. You move into one of these apartments, called tenements, where you live alongside two, three, four, maybe even five families. Unprotected from the elements, your children become sick from the mildew and the cold. Unable to find work, your children starve and are forced to steal. Unable to live, your husband drinks and abuses. Unable to survive, your family slowly dies and your children become orphans …show more content…
Unique beliefs, morals, and backgrounds dictate why one helps, how much one helps, and who one deems worthy of their help. Will a person who witnessed abuse when they were a child be more likely to help the abuser or the child covered in bruises? On the other hand, would someone who was previously an alcoholic be more likely to reach out to the drunken abuser than the person who was once abused? Both of these cases demonstrate that despite the differences of individuals, the inclination to help those in need derives from some sort of emotional connection of an individual to a person in need. Often this connection occurs out of empathy, as the individual can relate to the hardship of the individual in despair. Other times this connection is derived from the sympathy of the individual and the pity one feels when he or she observes a person’s hardships, exactly what prompted progressives to become reformers. Empathy, sympathy, and pity all reveal how emotions have the power to create this false sense of obligation. They evoke this need for action by constructing the thought of I should which many times transforms into I must. The “Moral Debate” summarizes this phenomenon when the individual states, “Essentially, if one understands another and their pain, a moral obligation is thus created.” Later, the individual adds, “Some could create a meaning or create an understanding that compels them to assist