Brainard Cheney Essays

  • Religion in the Works of Flannery O'Connor

    1982 Words  | 4 Pages

    Religion in the Works of Flannery O'Connor Religion is a pervasive theme in most of the literary works of the late Georgia writer Flannery O'Connor. Four of her short stories in particular deal with the relationship between Christianity and society in the Southern Bible Belt: "A Good Man Is Hard to Find," "The River," "Good Country People," and "Revelation." Louis D. Rubin, Jr. believes that the mixture of "the primitive fundamentalism of her region, [and] the Roman Catholicism of her faith

  • Thursday, by Leighton Pierce

    861 Words  | 2 Pages

    middle of paper ... ...rmation we seek, for example “I remember big fat ties with fish on them.” (Brainard 6) could perhaps take place in any time period, others, such as “I remember the day Marilyn Monroe died.” (Brainard 7), gives the reader an idea of when the author was alive. It is through these devices that Brainard keeps us reading to find out more of his past. Both Pierce and Brainard used excellent methods in their respective works to create intriguing and interesting pieces that give

  • Colin Powell: Transformational Leader

    2831 Words  | 6 Pages

    1. Introduction & Definition Transformational leadership describes a leader moving followers beyond immediate self-interests through idealized influence (charisma), inspiration motivation, intellectual stimulation, or individualized consideration. Transformational leaders are change agents. They influence the mission and objectives to make way for a brighter future for the organization. Followers are motivated to do more than is originally expected because of their feelings of trust and respect

  • An Argument for Conservatism

    1371 Words  | 3 Pages

    known individuals who have helped contribute to the development and direction of neoconservatism over the past few decades include Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Norman Podhoretz, UN Ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick, Nathan Glazer, and Dick and Lynne Cheney (Ball and Dagger, 2011b, p. 113). While I personally do not adhere to this ideology, and there are many features I completely disagree with, I will nevertheless stake an affirmative argument for neoconservatism and write as if I am an actual supporter

  • The West Wing: The TV Show

    1019 Words  | 3 Pages

    The West Wing Technology is growing fast, as is the new generations branching off with new forms of media and devices that provide us with the news. News and politics have had difficulty when informing its public and community of the events that happen in their community. Now the media and news are growing to reform to the earlier generation’s way of receiving the news and events related to them, by using media and popular culture. According to Wodak, for politics to air and to engage and intrigue

  • Farenheit 911

    1051 Words  | 3 Pages

    start of 2005, their gross income was well over the $10 billion mark, and is still rising. There are a few areas of dispute with the selection of this company. In July and August of 2003 One of them being based on the fact that Vice President Dick Cheney was the former CEO of Halliburton, which is now the biggest single government contractor in Iraq. Another disputable area is that by appointing private corporations such as Halliburton costs taxpayers more money than what should be spent by the government

  • Nepotism in Our Society

    1333 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nepotism is a delicate issue. How can parents not use all of their resources to insure that their children will succeed? Is giving your relative a head start a scandalous violation of our society's conventions? Isn't blood thicker than water (or money)? On the other hand, don't we belong to a free country that gives everybody an equal opportunity? Do you wish to be passed over for a promotion by the unqualified niece of your boss' company? Does relation outweigh merit? Nepotism is a universal trait

  • Interrogation Vs Enhanced Interrogation

    996 Words  | 2 Pages

    enhanced interrogation us... ... middle of paper ... ... planes into Heathrow Airport, and buildings in downtown London. The critics of the program should be asked; “which of these attacks I have just described would they prefer we had not stopped?” (Cheney 5). All in all, enhanced interrogation can be an effective and acceptable means of gathering information that has been shown to protect the lives of U.S. citizens. Though similar in that enhanced interrogation methods and torture force information

  • Mo' Money, Mo' Greed & Corruption

    1800 Words  | 4 Pages

    Mo' Money, Mo' Greed & Corruption The American dream: a spouse, a few children, a lucrative job, a nice home, and of course, some material luxuries. Those who are able to realize this goal have my respect and they should be proud of their accomplishments. However, my beef arises with the very few Americans who greatly surpass this dream. Yes, I mean the multi-millionaires and billionaires of America. The wealthiest one percent of our nation owns half the financial assets and 38 percent of

  • I Am Queer

    1789 Words  | 4 Pages

    Cheerleaders with beards strolled arm in arm down the street. "Women" with three-foot-high green bee-hives giggled at silver-lame suited space boys. Six-foot-five divas draped in sequins and heels and attitudes that extended around them like magical auras sauntered along, too beautiful, too glamorous, to even notice the ordinary people around them. But if a camera, glinting in the sunlight, caught their eyes, they turned fiercely, like dragons with glittering scales, not to attack, but to pose. Some

  • Gendered Language of War

    3277 Words  | 7 Pages

    Gendered Language of War The ways in which we have come to understand, explain and react to the attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001 are coded by our linguistic system and the meanings it constructs. Words mediate between internal, cognitive responses to war and external, behavioral responses (Beer 9). These words, and the complex system of meaning and power that they constitute, are gendered: "in this symbolic system, human characteristics are dichotomized

  • Fracking: Extracting Natural Gas

    1110 Words  | 3 Pages

    Introduction: Environmental and socioeconomic debate over an alternative method of extracting natural gas thousands of feet below the surface using horizontal drilling and hydraulic “fracking” has risen in last twenty years. Fracking is the technique of drilling deep wells under high pressure with sand, water and a variety of chemicals to crack open rocks to release natural gas (hydrogen carbons) and oil from shale or coal bed methane deposits. Townships in Colorado like Lafayette and Fort Collins

  • Propaganda

    1827 Words  | 4 Pages

    Bush and Cheney: Propaganda In A Over-Confident Way What does the word propaganda really mean? For most of us we assume that it is a word for negativity use. Just to assure those that think of propaganda as a negative word. Propaganda does have a positive objective if used correctly. The word propaganda is defined in a few different ways, But in the most general usage, it varies from bad to good persuasion of our minds. It is used during election time to our daily lives on television to our newspaper

  • Analysis Of When The Levees Broke

    1055 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hurricane Katrina has affected the lives of thousands of Americans. According to Anne Waple of NOAA’s National Climate Data Center, Katrina is “one of the most devastating natural disasters in recent US history” leaving “At least 80% of New Orleans…under flood water”. Film director, Spike Lee, in his documentary, When the Levees Broke, looks into the lives of the people of New Orleans that was affected by Hurricane Katrina. Lee’s purpose is to address racial disparities, political issues, and the

  • The Presidential Election of 2004

    932 Words  | 2 Pages

    Analyze the Presidential election of 2004. What happened and why? Analyze the changing nature of the media and how that is affecting politics. The two questions identified above cannot be adequately answered alone without one influencing the other because a campaign that influences the election of the most powerful position in the world is a public event. However, after months of predictions of a too-close-to-call contest, Bush won nationwide balloting making him the 15th president elected to