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    The certain questions about: “Do corporations control the government more than the government than the government control the corporations?”, and “In what ways do corporations cause social problems?”, are very wide questions and it is a different from country to country. Because, in Sweden there I am from, the government are controlling the corporations, and in Russia, the corporations are controlling the government. In this paper, I am going to use the book “Crisis in American institution” as…

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    The week’s reading is The Origins of Totalitarian by Hannah Arendt. In this reading, she talks about the origins of a totalitarian state and how they, the power holder, strive for control. Some of the ways the power holders hold power is through the gullibility of the people being ruled and that the fear of their “freedom” being taken. From this reading, there were some questions that I had about it ranging from the rationale to her thinking to the freedoms that each citizen's had under a…

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    different structures of power, different favored types of government, and different types of classes. Where Plato bases his ideas off of a faux society, Aristotle uses examples of past civilizations to discuss several different theories and explanations. Though Aristotle was a student of Plato, he had a very different approach to the ideal state than his teacher. According to Plato in his piece of work, The Republic, everything decays. Government is not exempt from this, which is the basis of…

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    Pros And Cons Of Democracy

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    Elections are fair, laws are passed that represent as much of society as possible, and every decision is meticulous in nature, trying to give all sides what they need. While these are all great things to have in a government, it is pointless to spend this much time and effort making every decision. In dictatorships, efficiency is key. With a small one-party committee (or sometimes no committee at all) deciding candidates, elections can take a fraction of the time and…

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    Plato's View Of Democracy

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    Since there is no absolute rule in democracy, Hobbes believes that the government maintains instabilities of which are characteristics of the state of nature. For instance, Hobbes recognizes competition in a democratic government which could lead to the “war of all against all” and creating grater instability (Apperley, 1999) Firstly, the increase in competition amongst the people in a democracy produces…

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    past. When people fail to look at the past, they are doomed to repeat history, time and time again. The world has seen this with tyrants, and in the United States with taxes. Taxes are how the government makes money to support programs such as welfare, Medicaid and running the military. The more the government cuts taxes the worse things become. Supply-side economics, also known as Reaganomics, now known as Trumponomics is and will be a failure. Although many Americans get excited about cutting…

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    resource for politicians and democracy. He goes in depth on the behavioral discoveries that explain why humans act differently in large groups, how they adopt a sort of “hive mentality”. There are interesting conflicts between philosophers wanting governments to operate a certain way, but it ultimately fails due to human nature unable to work properly in enormous herds. The three features of this mass condition include the understanding of how masses work and what drives their decision…

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    the community. So, he brings up compelling argument that those who are most virtuous should rule (100-103). While in the “Second Treatise of Government” Locke explains the nature of humanity, state of nature, and the civil government. Locke’s belief is that all humans are born into…

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    President Reagan uses narrative in his speech to help illustrate his main points as well as strengthen his argument. Reagan uses the embedded narrative style. This means the narratives he uses are placed inside the speech at key points. By using narrative, Reagan is able to give credibility to his argument as well as create identification between himself and the audience. The credibility is shown when Reagan uses a well-known explorer to connect the Challenger accident to a story that offers…

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    politics, in fact, it has continued to get worse over the years. In “The Negative Consequences of Uncivil Political Discourse” Sandy Maisel states that the “lack of civility has led to the decline in citizen approval of trust in our institutions of government” (Maisel 405). Maisel discusses the impact of incivility and how it can sway the public opinion to doubt the way politics are being handled. He discussing about how uncivil outbursts are not what cause concern, it is the lack of action,…

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