Précis Response In the article "White House Red Scare" (7 January 2017), columnist Maureen Dowd affirms her current political opinion that the United States government is overridden with anxiety and bewilderment due to the callous and perhaps "malleable" newly elected president, Donald Trump. Dowd justifies her stance of the cumbersome issue by the use of anecdotes (her own personal encounters with Donald Trump), past incidences of Trump's rapid stance-changes (being skeptical of the Russian
In “Trapped in Trump’s Brain” is an editorial written by Maureen Dowd, a democratic columnist. Recently, President Trump has been passing many laws that the public disagree upon such as the Ban Act. He also lack giving a good and efficient response in interviews. Many people see him having characteristics of a dictator. Her is that because Trump does not trust anyone who disagrees with him it leads to a political mess and shows his narcissistic side. The purpose is to show that Trump is very clueless
Since the beginning of humankind, discrimination is an unfair parameter, which categorizes people according to same criteria such as religion racism, politics, gender and sexual orientations. The most crucial type of discrimination is gender discrimination since “gender” is an inherited feature that was given to human and it is not a preferable thing. Although it is not preferable, people damaged notion of human-being by considering people separately as women and men, and clearly categorized them
Liberal, feminist, satirical. Only one journalist comes to mind when reading those three descriptions: Maureen Dowd. Beginning her career as a sports journalist, she has worked her way up the totem pole to achieve the status of political columnist for The New York Times. Set apart from her peers by her brutal honesty, highly-acclaimed sarcasm, and clear feminist agenda, she is able to capture her audience’s attention within the first sentences of her various publications, while leaving room for the
articles “What is an American: a Primer” written by Peter Ferrara, “Drill, Grill and Chill” written by Maureen Dowd and John Steinbeck’s “Paradox and dream”. In Peter Ferrara’s article, titled “What is an American: a Primer” written on, September twenty-fifth two thousand and one, he claims that an American is any person who is looking for a better life for themselves and their family. Maureen Dowd takes a sarcastic approach to describing what an American is in her article “Drill, Grill and Chill”
In the article, “The Google Art Heist,” author Maureen Dowd starts off describing the playful atmosphere at Google and shares her skepticism of their Cultural Institute that wants to digitally replicate and curate all art and culture on earth. Throughout the article Dowd raises questions concerning this idea and then uses a statement from Amit Sood, the head of the institute, to answer those concerns. One concern was that attendance at museums would likely decline, Sood reported data showing that
Press: Crazy, Stupid Love” by Maureen Dowd and published in The New York Times. The article used irony to illustrate the way that President Trump changes his view on a subject or his hypocritical tendencies. He often contradicts himself and the article presented two recent occasions in which he contradicted himself or was a hypocrite. The first example was when Dowd said, “spews a constant stream of wild assertions based on anonymous sources - blustered
middle-aged white guys — a sepia snapshot of the days when such pols ran Washington like their own men’s club — Joe Wilson yelled “You lie!” at a president who didn’t. But, fair or not, what I heard was an unspoken word in the air: You lie, boy!" -- Maureen Dowd Quote"14) Disliking the fact that Obama is President: "They can’t stand the idea that he’s president, and a piece of it is racism. Not that somebody in one racial group doesn’t like somebody in another
Victorian Satire During the Victorian era from 1837-1901 there were a number of satirical newspapers and magazines in print. However, during this time the biggest examples of satire was seen in the theatrical works of Gilbert and Sullivan along with the literature of Mark Twain and to a lesser extent Charles Dickens which both addressed the issues of poverty and race that were plaguing society both English and American society at the time. The satire used by Dickens and Twain was quickly followed