Dr.Seuss’s Butter Battle Book Many kids can recall reading Dr.Seuss's stories and rhymes. They are simple yet always have a story or message about them that anyone can understand. Whether it's about green eggs and ham or colorful fish. Dr.Seuss books Green Eggs and Ham, 1 Fish 2 Fish Red Fish Blue Fish, and The Butter Battle Book are all great children's stories that even adults can enjoy.…
“Tear Down This Wall” Started in the 1960s, the Cold War between the Democratic United States of America and the Communistic Soviet Union had become an ongoing issue around the world, and has implemented fear among the German Berliners. The Berlin Wall was built by Communists in August 1961 to retain Germans from departing East Berlin into West Berlin. The wall stood as a symbol of separation and the Cold War between the two countries. On June 12, 1987, President Ronald Reagan, who was known as the “Great Communicator”, came to West Berlin to assure hope to the people of Berlin, both the west and the east. In the well-known speech, “Tear down This Wall”, President Ronald Reagan utilizes ethos, emotional appeal, anaphora, and rhetorical questions to persuade the West Berliners to never give up hope, and entice the Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to tear down the Berlin Wall.…
“Border Fencing Is Bad Policy” According to Melanie Mason, the author of “Border Fencing Is Bad Policy”, the United States should not build a fence that spans the border of Mexico. There are 12 million undocumented immigrants living in America, and the author claims that a fence will stop nothing. The government has been trying to put more barriers between America and severely restrict immigration, but according to Mason, “the border fence is a political band-aid for a larger policy problem.” By using evidence and appealing to human compassion, Mason convinces the reader that a border fence is unnecessary and a small issue covering up a larger one.…
They felt that they must protect Berlin as if it fell it would not be long before the rest of Europe would fall to Communism. This conflict in ideology eventually caused the Berlin Wall to be built. At first the people living in the East of Berlin were allowed to travel to the West and were able to see the progress there. Hundreds of thousands defected to the West as the preferred the capitalist way of life. The Soviet Union lost skilled workers and felt threatened they would lose more.…
Thousand of East Berliners who were dissatisfied with the Eastern Communist Government found hope and had been moving into the Western Democratic government for a better life. Even though the official purpose of the raising wall was to keep western “fascists” separated from the East in order to prevent them from influencing the communist state the USSR had formed. It raised at a time of growing tension between East and West because of the desire of the Allies and the USSR had of Europe’s control. The building of the Berlin Wall directly affected the lives of millions of people in Europe and especially in Berlin, because of the division it created from Eastern communists and Western democrats. The Berlin Wall was built to divide Eastern and Western Germany because of the political differences between the USSR and the…
The Berlin Wall was a barrier that separated the west side of Berlin from the east side of Berlin. The wall was built in 1961, and torn down in 1989 (History.com Staff, 2016). The Berlin Wall was built to keep the fascists of West Berlin out of East Berlin, and to make sure that the fascists had no influence on the socialist state of East Berlin (History.com Staff, 2016). Berlin was in the heart of the portion of Germany controlled by the Soviets, or as Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev put it, “Stuck like a bone in the Soviets throat” (History.com Staff, 2016). However, Berlin was split between four different countries, those four different countries were The Soviet Union, France, England, and the United States.…
On the 12th of June, 1987, President Ronald Reagan delivered a powerful and emotional speech in west Berlin, Germany. This speech was addressing the Berlin Wall, and all of the political issues that came with it. 26 years prior to Reagan’s speech, the Berlin wall was built to separate the communist East from the “Allied” west, this wall was extremely controversial and kept any people from leaving west Berlin without great difficulty. Reagan’s speech had immense impact on Berlin, 2 years after his speech, the Berlin Wall was taken down and both East and West Berliners couldn’t have been happier. Reagan successfully motivates his audience to continue their fight for freedom and unity by appealing to pathos using vivid imagery and contrasting…
One major event that occurred during Kennedy’s presidency was the Bay of Pigs Invasion. This was the attempted invasion of Cuba. Eisenhower started to plan this, but he left Kennedy to make the final decision. This invasion was being considered so that the Cuban dictator, Castro, would be overthrown, and so that the Communist influence wouldn’t spread to that region. This invasion ended up being a failure because of the support for Castro in Cuba.…
After World War II, Germany split through Berlin, making an East and West Berlin. The economic standpoint in East Germany was not sustainable, so that made those citizens want to move over to the West side. Being under Soviet control, the migration of these people started to collapse the East. By August 1961, the Soviets stopping the flow of people by building the Berlin Wall, a infamous symbolic landmark of the Cold War. Two US Presidents, those being JFK and Reagan, commented and wrote speeches to those stopped from achieving their wants and freedoms to those in East Berlin.…
Remarks at the brandenburg gate Ronald Reagan in his persuasive speech, “Tear down this wall”,(June 12, 1987); Ronald Reagan suggests,”Es gibt nur ein Berlin. [There is only one Berlin.]”, Ronald Reagan is strongly stating that there is only one Berlin, he says it in German, which is a pathos, he uses it because it is the native language of the area which he spoke at. Ronald Reagan uses diction, ethos and a understanding tone, one which he feels what the people want and therefore addresses the German political officials on the issues about the wall and how there should not be a “East” or “West” berlin Ronald Wilson Reagan was born on February 6, 1911, in the small town of Tampico, Illinois, to parents John Reagan and Nelle Wilson Reagan. Like…
One example of this can be seen when the Reagan states that “as long as this scar of a wall is permitted to stand… it is a question of freedom for all mankind” (Reagan). Reagan’s metaphorical comparison between the wall and a scar emphasizes the ugliness of the wall and how out of place it is. By making this comparison and naming the wall as “a question of freedom,” the author depicts the wall as a symbol of anti-freedom and communism. In doing this, the author furthers his purpose of demolishing the Berlin Wall by evoking strong feelings of freedom. Another example can be seen when the author states how “four decades ago there was rubble, [but] today in West Berlin there is the greatest industrial output of any city in Germany” (Reagan).…
Challenging the leader of the Soviet Union, President Ronald Reagan issued a statement on June 12, 1987. He arrived to the Brandenburg Gate in West Berlin with a challenge: to tear down the Berlin Wall and rally citizens to oppose the wall and accept democracy, “Come here to this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!” There was no doubt that Reagan was a world leader and his word was very impactful.…
The beginning of the Cold War created a new era of division, power, and communist ideals. During this fight for control, one of the biggest construction endeavors in history took place, known as the Berlin Wall. This blockade was built by the Soviet Union and East Berlin soldiers in order to cease the flow of emigrants into the West. The formulation of the Berlin Wall led to a separation of the people, a fight for freedom in government, a struggle for survival, and a political battle between World War II allies.…
The fall of the Berlin Wall not only symbolized the end of the Cold War, communism, and dictatorship in Eastern Germany, but it was also a great impact on European history. The Berlin Wall, despite its monstrous purpose, brought some positive consequences to the people of Germany. During the twenty-eight years the wall stood, many friendships and families were torn apart due to a physical separation, as well as metaphorical due to stigmas, controversies, and stereotypes. As the wall was built up, lifelong relationships were torn down. For some Berliners, however, it created tighter bonds, as people supported their peers who had been separated from friends, family, and lovers.…
The period from 1945 to 1991 is most commonly known as the “Cold War”. This was a time of fear and suspense. The arms race drove both the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) to do drastic things to keep up with each other’s weapons. The cold war negatively affected the U.S.A., the U.S.S.R., and the world by taking money to spend on arms, giving some children ptsd, and by degrading and endangering the lives of many people.…