to make sure that we speak out against and challenge any kind of insanity, any kind of insanity that makes it okay to kill unarmed people. Regardless of their ethnicity, regardless of their race, regardless of their diversity makeup. We have to challenge that, it doesn’t make any …show more content…
Huck’s views on Jim changes to a more modern perspective. At this point, Samuel Clemens is using Huck to say that any white male can see any black male as a friend, not an object. In the past, black people were seen as slaves, to be owned and bought from master to master. They didn’t have the right to have their own thoughts or emotions. The only purpose of them being in societies were to work for white people. In the novel, Huck begins to emphasize with Jim through a series of conversations. Huck begins to see how human Jim really is, although he is black. One night Huck wakes up to Jim ‘moaning and mourning’ for his family. Jim later goes into detail in his family then Huck concludes that, “I do believe he card just as much for his people as white folks does for their’n” (Twain 162). Huck now begins to get a full understanding that Jim can have human emotions and thoughts. At the beginning of their friendship, Huck wouldn’t have been able to engage in such conversations because of Huck’s attitude towards Jim. After Huck learns that Jim has human emotions, Huck finds some common ground with Jim. Huck sees Jim equal to himself. At this point Huck has disregarded the things that he