Jonathan Wick Dictator

Great Essays
A structure in resemblance of a tower sits atop ruined pavement in a desolate field, residing within a predominantly vacant country. Packed as it used to be, no longer; for, the USA, along similar lines of other world powers, crumbled under the weight of division and civil war. Nearly had the country come close to falling entirely, before a man of around forty years of age stepped in and slithered his way into power.
“President”, though what the powerful man chose to entitle himself, may be the most inaccurate and offensive term he could refer himself as, for a true president cannot run a country like a dictator; in fact, “dictator” was more commonly associated with the man than his proper title was. Of this fact, everyone’s favorite “president”, Jonathan Wick, seemed to be wholly oblivious.
In the aforementioned tower, in which was objectively incompatible with the surrounding scenery, Wick gathered his thoughts in a nice chair, wearing a tailored suit. The man carried with him impressive and desirably authority, through which, after making up his mind, he ordered for the arrest of a group of freethinkers, who had the audacity to speak out against his admirable self.
Whilst Wick lived his enviable life of fortune and power, other residents of the country lived ignorant of even the idea of life outside of
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So, put off were the colonists when a certain letter, whose author remained anonymous, arrived at each of their respective colonies. The letter, entitled, “The Imminent Demise of Our Unruly Dictator”, spoke of what the colonists would praise as a utopian society, free from the command of “our unruly dictator”. The author took the liberty of explaining an intricate plan, which, if executed correctly, could lead to the overtaking of

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