
Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous
Bio
Known as a Significant Voice in Modern Literature, a Poet of the Year, 2020 Black Author Matters Winner, 2025 Black Authors Matter Children Book Awards Nominee for his books, and International Impact Awards' Author of the Year Nominee
Stories (429)
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Ending Racism in America
Ending Racism Will Greatly Impact the Black Family- An ESSAY Racism has influenced politics for decades. White middle class values overrode black family values even with World War II, where the economy favored whites and progress was given over to white majority. One of the values of the white middle class was males being the breadwinner of the household. The black family had to survive in poverty with kin networking. The war was supposed to bring the country together and bring equality, yet racism kept the divide. Some whites did not want to be considered equal to blacks. Jim Crow laws in the South and ghettos in the North oppressed the black family. The Jim Crow laws would instill fear into the black family, which made them give in to racism. Racism prevailed in the country, and it greatly impacted the black family. They were seen as second-class citizens until the civil rights legislation, which ended this status. Moynihan diverted attention to the black family structure with his report entitled The Negro Family: A Case for National Action. Moynihan in his report stated that the black family was a pathology, which was racist because he did not take the time to understand their culture and the environmental factors that influence their lives. Education, wealth and income inequity, and sexuality were influenced by racism, therefore ending racism is a solution that will greatly impact the black family.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in The Swamp
Reviewing Whitaker's Anatomy of an Epidemic.
Medical Concept Robert Whitaker wrote the book called “The Anatomy of an Epidemic.” The book addresses the challenges concerning the medical model of mental health diagnosis and treatment. Whitaker outlined the history of the psychopharmacology era. He wrote that the government and early researchers tried to find a magic bullet to cure mental illness. In this journey, they found many misdiagnoses and discrepancies. He found that early researchers and pharmaceutical companies misguided the public about medication; that is, he found test results being misconstrued. For example, Whitaker found that there is no evidence that brain dysfunction is the reason for mental illness. Whitaker explains that research has proven that some medication blocked the neurotransmitter thus causing the mental illness rather than curing the mental illness. He focuses on military recruitment efforts and how the government influenced the mental health industry. His book explains the history of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM III) from the American Psychiatric Association and how it came about to establish the industry of psychiatry. Whitaker argues that the DSM III saved the industry by clearly outlining the symptoms from professionals' observation. Even though there was no definite cause of mental illness, the DSM III verified that it exists and should be known.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in Longevity
Supporting Adolescents with ASD Transition to Adulthood
Factors Supporting Adolescents with ASD Transition to Adulthood Autism or Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is prevalent among the U.S. population. According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5th Edition (2013), about 1% of the U.S. children and adults experience ASD. Specifically, 1 in 68 adolescents has ASD (Anderson & Butt, 2017). Even though the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5th Edition (DSM-5) asserts that research has not found specific causes of mental illness, it has addressed some consequences including the dropout rate among adolescents (e.g., Anderson & Butt, 2017; Goldstein et al., 2018) thus resulting in low quality of life of adolescents with ASD compared to those without ASD (Goldstein et al., 2018). Moreover, even though transition services for adolescents with ASD are expanding, the outcomes remain bleak. Transition services focused on developing daily living skills related to executive functioning for goal attainment, follow-through, as well as managing self-care needs should be a priority (e.g. Alverson, Lindstrom, & Hirano, 2015). High school transition services designed to develop and support youth's internal motivation, disability awareness, family supports, and clear post-school goals are crucial for them to be college and career ready.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in Psyche
President Kennedy's Insights
There are things that we need to do that we have to do and it cannot be stalled any longer. We must be determined and focus on our life's purpose and we cannot settle for praise but achieve the glory set before us. When it comes to politics, we cannot be easy-going and light-hearted. We must be firm and directed led by the belief that unity is the force that unites us. We cannot fear to do the things that we hope for, to elevate the good nature of all men and women. To see from the eyes of others and give empathy where it is due. Time has changed and our time has come. To do the things that must be done. This is what Kennedy believed in.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in The Swamp
Jackson-The American Hero
Andrew Jackson, born into poverty, knew how it drew the life out of Americans. Determined at a young age and filled with ambitions that could not be contained by poverty. With the death of his father at an early age, he had to drop out of education, which would have further his ambitions. To help his younger brother and beloved mother, he served at an early age for the country he so loved. A faithful soldier that rose in the ranks and never cowering to defeat as he was wounded in the head by an enemy and beaten in jailed. He refused to give up his loyalty to his country and strong-willed for the union. He met obstacle after obstacle in the middle of his career, his beloved mother passed. Stricken with grief he sought love from a lovely woman who reminded him of his beloved mother. As a military man, he survived poverty and gain a reputation and wealth.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in The Swamp
Journey of a Person with Disability
Non-profits that counsel such as EastHouse and non-profits that treat such as Rochester Rehab aiding clinics and hospitals in treating people with disabilities. This is what families, friends, and people with disabilities should be researching and searching for because life coaches can provide motivation and inspiration to overcome illnesses. Sudden fear overwhelms us all but it is a meditation on the positivity that bridges the gap to hope. We cannot be afraid to ask for help and get help on things that are important to us. We must let nothing stop us from reaching our goals because our goals define us and our lives.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in Psyche
The Nuclear War
As a delegate to Melecon IEEE, the world's foremost engineering organization who attributed me to the sole founder of Integrity Intrigue Innovation Inc., the title Doctor of Engineering and Philosophy. I wrote to the Nobel Peace Prize Foundation about a theory of reversing Albert Einstein's nuclear weaponry. The universe was made from gases and has been developed through gases overtime. Human beings were not the first to harness the power of gases and explosions, it is what this earth was made of and what the Heavens are still doing for thousands of years and billions of times. As stars and planets fade away or become into being. Our existence consists of gases and balancing their reaction within our system and the earth. Gravity is a chemical force that pulls those reactions toward each other and in respective. If we are to survive the present chemical evolution brought by human innovations and explorations then we must learn how to react the way our universe reacts to become a balancer and stabilizer. All the planets and stars use gases and feed off of them and build off of them. We can't leave earth empty-handed and continue to destroy as its growth has slowed down. We must be the keepers of our future and learn to do what is impossible to preserve this universe with our knowledge.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in Futurism
The Sins of Money
Money can do a lot of good but it is the evil done with the money that causes the most troubled. Money is a concept and it goes beyond race, class, age, and gender. Oppression is a common tool of money. Some people with money believed that they can walk on whoever they please because they have not found anything equal to the weight of money. This is why we had so many rebellions against the law and order. The law covers an offense for the price of money. Money has no limit because our society empowers money as an influence. If you can influence the right people then you can win any case. We have equated money to above the law. We must move steps toward controlling the influence of money in politics and society as a whole. Money degrades race, class, age, and gender even though it can avail it. It sets a standard and takes away all humanity making everything able to buy at a price even life. When one life is above the other life because of money in the eyes of the law, then justice is detoured.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in Motivation
The Data Science Revolution
It was a paper airplane made by my Second Grade Teacher that inspired me as an inventor to think outside the box and build Integrity Intrigue Innovation Inc. and my mother's budgeting genius that made it possible.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in 01
Healthcare in America
We are at a crossroads in healthcare. We have to face devastating cuts. Our very way of life is at stake. It is gonna take some preventative thinking and innovative way to deliver effective healthcare for a reasonable price. We know in research when we cut around the corner, the whole research becomes invalid. We have to start from the beginning. It is the same way in healthcare. All professionals must be involved in the process for the process to work. Nurses and doctors and even secretaries have to be involved so that healthcare becomes effective in doing their job to make sure all patients have a long enduring fighting chance for their health. This may importantly include their families. We need the support of families and close friends to help interpret the risks and benefits and help in decision-making. America is divided into healthcare along three lines, the poor ineffective system costing billions of dollars, the temporary system that lasts as long as there is money, and the wealthy system where there are security and possibility.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in The Swamp
Modern Epidemics
Every doctor takes The Hippocratic Oath to not harm and ensuring that the medicine used is lifesaving. Whatever happens to our health professionals staying true to this oath that begin in Ancient Greece. It was what you could hold your doctor to and if any harm happened then they would have to explain themselves and the steps that they took to ensure the health and safety of their patient. We must end the money disruption in the health system because it overlooks and undermined the value health can bring to society, We must create a society that can trust its health professionals and listen to their evident-based answer. In this epidemic, it grows ever so imperative that we make healthcare a right and other necessities that cause poverty a right. We have the knowledge and the proven facts that these necessities lead to meager ends and we must acknowledge that. Again, we see in this epidemic that those bound by poverty suffering the most along with minorities. This is unacceptable and the government can balance out the effects and minimize them by researching and providing adequate support. We are met with one universal point of direction choosing either longevity or death. We can no longer ignore the consequences of not only diverse leadership but also ignoramus wants. Our needs must come before our wants, what we need to do right now is more important than a want for greater freedom.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in The Swamp
Lincoln the Unifier
The war was raging yet Lincoln kept his light on the good of the union and the good of his countrymen and countrywomen. With every twist and every turn, he did not waver in his ability to negotiate. He remembered from his mother's last words, to never change and never compromise character to stay the same honest. He felt that his position gave him the greatest opportunity to use eloquence and diplomacy to get the right earning from the intense labor like a farmer, he was ever patient even with little time. This is how he educated himself, a little at a time until the heart desired more. Lincoln worked for everything he had in life and was too poor for privilege until he found himself. As president, he knew that the due season harvested will come on time. Lincoln secretly wanted to save his three living predecessors who were tortured and trapped by the Confederates. Even though he did not agree with his predecessors' stance, he believed that serving the highest office is a privilege that requires careful and dignified actions. With all-partisan set-aside, he knew that he had to act and to act quickly. Who knows what they might say about the union and who knows what they've been put through? Good, Old Lincoln answered the call because he believed that they can help him negotiate the future of America. He always thought about building America again and better including every issue that has been left out to restore the justice needed to last forever. This climax his decision to make sure that he makes the South yield to a truce because he saw how brutal their ambition was and how they dreaded the union. Lincoln had no other choice but to advance the war and keep the peace of the North, he saw that the South wanted to utterly destroy the Union and he was not going to let that happen. He remembered the belief of Van Buren who entrusted the presidency to him before he died winning his vote and support. Lincoln reminded Van Buren of the son who went to the Navy and served his country proudly. Van Buren had a son named Abraham and Lincoln had relatives in New York and it is believed that he came to New York, his relative Andrew Lincoln had a clothing company in East Rochester, New York like Washington came to Pittsford in the 16th Century. Lincoln's resolve was " That we remained one country and united but with no divisions." He knew this task would seem impossible but he did not waver in doing so making it known to his closest allies. And he knew his death would be on the line for taking the side of the liberation and using peaceful devices but also he was prepared and he prepared the union with leaders who were like him to win the nation over. He did not want to die a death in vain but a death that will bring the Union back together remembering that we need each other and that we need to be united for the good of all. That we have a mission to this land and this world to not tarry in ourselves but to avail ourselves as equal and no maltreatment or division has enough strength to divided us when too much blood united us. Lincoln kept the Radical Republicans at bay and always seeing the light manage to edge victory. For he felt each day that he is living and standing for something, it is not in vain. Lincoln believed this despite losing children and not having much of his birth family behind him but through faith and friendship enlightened the world. He was never afraid to defend friends and allies, something he learned all the time with Susan B. Anthony introducing him to supporters to win the presidency, Sojourner Truth as his personal minister who taught him about the struggles of everyday Americans. Frederick Douglass as his loyal friend who visited his house not too long after being freed, and Ulysses Grant, the general he renamed, his most faithful successor. Abraham Lincoln found friends and allies in all walks of life.
By Distinguished Honorary Alumni Dr. Matthew Primous5 years ago in The Swamp