Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on How American Society Can Change. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 9 page paper presents the ideation that American society is flawed, loosely based on Marxist notions.The lives of infamous figures including Princess Diana and Frederick Douglass are examined. The paper supports the notion that the examples of great leaders can change America. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA26Amer.doc
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
They cannot see anything but moving shadows which they take to be reality (128). Is that not like the digital dashboard on any 1999 SUV automobile? Might someone born into
a middle to upper class environment, who contemplates the mileage on the section of the dash, and fidgets with the radio, not unlike the chained man in the cave? The
mileage after all is symbolic of where they have been and where they might go, but it is clearly focused on their own selfish lives. How can that be? Someone
born in 1990s America, who is lucky enough to have a job and a middle class, white picket fenced existence is not chained to their four bedroom, three bath homes
nor to their BMW station wagons. How can anyone compare their lives with someone chained to a cave? If one thinks very hard, the analogy becomes crystal clear. The chain
represents the attachment to wealth and the job that pays the mortgage and the $600 per month car payment. Is that so bad? It is, when one thinks about the
people who arent lucky enough to live with blinders on. These are the people, who are quite numerous, but fall through the cracks of the great governmental system of the
United States of America. And whether the people who have "made it" are happy or not is not an issue. They are still living a surreal existence. The Joneses are
chained to their lifestyles. But the Joneses are America. Yet, the class stratification in the United States is so vast that the middle class is slowly, but surely disappearing. As
the middle income level dwindles, some have moved up but many are still struggling in the sea of competition. America was supposed to be the land of opportunity. What went
...