Being famous. What does that mean? It means, by definition, having a widespread reputation or being notorious. Generally people associate being famous with being admirable, respectable, and for lack of a better term good. But famous does not necessarily mean good though it is usually used in a positive notation. A person that is famous but for a malicious or revolting act is called infamous. An example of this is Ted Bundy. Most people know who he is or have heard the name even if they don’t know that Bundy was responsible for a series of killings in the 1970’s. This leads me to my net point;What does it mean to be shameful? If you are shameful it means that you have caused shame,are disgraceful or you are scandalous. Many people are both …show more content…
What does that mean? It means that the government ,state and federal, will promote the conditions to make the greatest amount of people have happiness, prosperity, and good health. While it is the government 's job to do this, sometimes in insuring the well-being of the majority some well-being and happiness is sacrificed. In the eighteen through nineteen hundreds people that were declared “crazy”, “insane”, and “unfit to live in normal society” were carted off to mental and insane asylums where they endured appalling and harrowing conditions. As a newly hired employee at the New York World Nellie Bly’s first job, in 1887 was to write an exposé about the conditions of the insane asylum on Blackwell’s Island. To report on this riveting subject Nellie Bly’s had to first get herself admitted to the asylum. This task took much effort on Bly’s part considering she had never spent time around the mentally ill. The first stop on the way to Blackwell’s asylum was a mirror. She practiced what a mentally insane person may do. She perfected an unseeing stare and a blank smile. Next she made her way to the Temporary Boarding House For Females, a boarding house where she rented a 30 cent room. Nellie Bly’s stayed there and waited, acting as peculiar (in a crazy way) as she could, to enable her to be sent to the asylum. After just one night the authorities were called and Bly had a trial wherein she was sent to the insane asylum on Blackwell’s Island. Once there Nellie was subjected to a number of tests to conclude answers about her insanity. She fooled