Analysis Of Torie Bosch's 'First, Eat All The Lawyers'

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I See Zombies Everywhere The article, “First, Eat All the Lawyers”, is an intriguingly written piece by Torie Bosch. Bosch is an editor for Future Tense, a digital magazine. Bosch 's editorial focus is on new innovations in technology and how this wave of the future impacts our current and future societies and public policies. The article meticulously analyzes in vivid details and with valid points the reasons as to why zombies are so popular within the American culture and, considering this is the month of the zombies, there is no pun intended. The article pulls you in and holds your attention by engaging you in a thought process in which you begin to examine yours and America 's past and current economic growth rates and issues. …show more content…

It 's also understandable that a huge number of people are worried about their jobs and their future no matter what color the collar of their job classification. Her analysis of the white-collar workers versus the blue-collar workers is very clear and reasonable. I can clearly see from what point of views she is advocating to support her claim that America is fixated on zombies because of the dire straits of the economy and that this fixation is held solely by the white-collar workers who fear they are becoming obsolete and will no longer be gainfully employed. It 's a highly plausible theory that the apocalypse could represent how the nation is suffering fiscally. However, her analysis is possible only if one simply accepts her view as illustrated in the article. It 's very difficult to understand how a failing economy could affect or impact only a specific group of workers when history has proven that a national economic recession will impact all working classes as a whole. In a major recession such as the one from which the nation is currently trying to recover, the majority of American workers will more than likely at some point worry about losing their jobs and becoming useless even …show more content…

There are too many opportunities in which her analysis can be challenged. For example, in the article, Bosch even acknowledges that her own career of journalism would be useless in the occurrence of a zombie apocalypse. This claim is easily rebuttable. I, for one, would think that if a reporter has access to a smart phone or a computer--social media, a radio, or a television station and has some useful information such as the location of the zombies, which way they are headed, approximately how many of them, or are safe locations available to the public to provide an escape from the zombies, even if I don 't have access to hear or receive this information as it 's being reported, I could possibly meet someone while running through the streets who would relay that information to me and I could relay it to others as we all try to elude the capture and a very hostile take over by the

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