Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on "Who Will Tell the People" by William Greider. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which reviews and analyzes William Greider's book "Who Will Tell the People?" No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAwhowll.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
deal through the centuries. In many cases it is for the worse. In William Greiders work "Who Will Tell the People?" he outlines many ways in which the government has
changed and become less concerned with the people and their wishes, something that is believed to be the basis of our government. The following paper examines what Greider is saying
needs to be told to the people, and how his work relates to present day realities, considering his work was originally written over 10 years ago. Who Will
Tell the People? Greider believes that the people need to be told that they are essentially not in control of the government at all. He is telling the reader that
people need to know how much it is big corporate interests and the elite that control the power in the nation. He wants people to know that even the media
is no longer for the people but for the special interests that possess the power and the money. He is telling us that the government does not even succeed at
keeping true to its own laws: "Corrective mechanisms that are supposed to prevent political manipulations have been purposely weakened. And public inherits a grave injustice: a government that will not
faithfully perform its most basic function-enforcing laws." (Greider, 1993; 107). His work is focused on letting the reader know how in many different types of situations, situations most people do
not pay attention to, the government is doing what it wants. It is pursuing whatever interests it finds enticing, with no regard to what the people want. The people can
complain all they want but the government has slowly altered, through such perspectives as law, to drastically reduce any power the people may have, or may have had. The big
...