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Showing posts from September, 2017

Written Like a True Scholar

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Academic writing is like listening to a smart British person talk. It's fancy and sophisticated. They use words that you would not use in everyday conversation. But, it's fun to listen to because of the unique diction and sophisticated appeal that comes with it. Being a college student, I have encountered academic writing for class and this exposure helped me see that there is so much time and research spent into things that you would not expect. That idea in it of itself shows that there are so many different interests people take on, and that the level of detail people can reach with these things is pretty amazing. In the anthropology class that I took last semester, we came across many different topics relating to the study of primate behavior. Some of the academic writing I had to look into regarded the activity budget of monkeys, which literally involved scientists watching what a monkey did all day. Of course, this is something that you would have to do if your field o...

Land of the Free, But Was It Meant to Be?

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I couldn't think of a title more emotionally appealing than "Attack Solidarity". What other aspect of American society is so fundamental and core to what makes us unique as a country? Freedom of opportunity and making sure everybody receives equal treatment are values that we all cherish as Americans. However, Chomsky's rhetorical strategies once again prevail in making us wonder if these things truly exist in our nation. Chomsky uses very specific language to create an image of people who are above you and control the things you do. For example, in the very second sentence of this chapter he states, "From the point of view of the masters, you're only supposed to care about yourself, not about other people". Specifically referring to the people who create policies and legislatures in our nation as "masters" depicts them as people who view American citizens as servants or slaves simply turning the cogs for our American system. He also continue...

The Wealthy are Winning

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A requiem is defined as an act of token or remembrance. Chomsky infamously titles his book, "Requiem for the American Dream", to suggest that the American Dream is only something of the past. He argues that although inequality is something that existed throughout American history, it has never reached the extent that we face today. He states, "There were periods like the Gilded Age in the 1890s and the Roaring Twenties and so on, when a situation developed rather similar to this, but the current period is extreme". This statement places a gap between our perception of inequality back in the day to not being so severe to something that is on a whole other level that we face currently. That is a very interesting thing to state because a core concept of the American Dream is that everybody has equal opportunity and thus there is equality within our country. But to point out the severe inequalities largely resulted by American policies supporting the extra-wealthy is ...

Battleships, Rifles, and Words

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The divorce rate today in America is nearly at 50 percent. A lot of this is, I believe, is because when some couples argue, they have war with each other. An argument is seen as who can have the better argument, and that only one side is right. That doesn't really sound right for how couples should argue, or how anybody should argue at all for that matter. But unfortunately, that is not the only display of destructive arguments that we see in our everyday lives. In fact, it can be seen on your TV screen on a daily basis. Jones states in her article, "argument as collaboration is not the prevailing metaphor for public argumentation we see/hear in the mainstream media", and boy is that the truth.  The recent Trump win was one of the biggest upset presidential victories in American history. It surprised the whole country when the minimally-filtered Trump gained a four-year ticket to the white house. However, Trump's vicious facade towards his opponents during the pr...

Equality and Success

Its crazy to think that during one of the toughest economic times in American history, a large majority of the people still have faith in their success or their ability to succeed. I think that says something about our culture, our beliefs, and most importantly, the resonance of the American dream. In a poll following the 2008-2009 recession, "75 percent told pollsters from CBS News and the New York Times that they had either already achieved the American Dream or that they expected to achieve it; only one in five said it was unattainable (CBS News/New York Times 2009)". With the recession being only second to the great depression as one of the greatest economic hits in American history, that is an outstanding statistic that symbolizes how people still have faith in the American dream. That was a very interesting statistic because I think that the idea of the American Dream is what pushes people to fight harder to succeed. Later on in the chapter, the au...