Friday, May 31, 2019

Professional Sports - Athletes do Not Deserve What they are Paid :: Argumentative Persuasive Topics

Professional Athletes do Not Deserve What the Earn   Wouldnt it be great to make 31.3 zillion dollars a year and an additional 47 million dollars in endorsements simply to play a game? Michael Jordan, along with many other professional athletes ventures so. In the 1996 season, playing 3,106 minutes Michael Jordan made 170,000 dollars a day, equaling forth to be 160.97 dollars a second. Even more unbelievable are Mike Tysons earnings in his match with Peter McNeeley. In a single second, he made 281,000 dollars (Professional AthletesÉ). Do these athletes really deserve all that money?   Professional athletes are making too much money in a society where salaries and wages are traditionally based on the value of ones work (Professional AthletesÉ). In todays society, one will be give more if their job is more economically important. However, teaching is one of the most economically important occupations because our future economy relies on the education of its yo uth, yet teachers are paid much less than the average professional athlete. The U.S President makes decisions that affect our economy and yet he only makes 250,000 dollars a year (Turner). Professional athletes do non play near as vital role in the economy as the president, but their salaries reflect otherwise. These games are supposed to be played for fun, not for millions of dollars.   Opponents of this view say payment is be received for a service, therefore professional sports are a business. Many people believe athletes are being paid for little work, but in fact they work harder than any one else. Not only do they work during their particular season they to a fault work in the off season. Most professional athletes train on their own striving to become better. They also attend miniature camps and their seasonal schooling camps. These athletes work year round to earn their high salaries.   Making it into the pros isnt an easy thing to do. It takes a tremendous numbe r of hours of hard work and dedication all(prenominal) day to earn a job in professional sports. These athletes sometimes go through life threatening injuries for the love of the game. Considering this, one might think that these athletes do it for the love of the game not for the money. According to Gerald Sim, The odds are higher for someone to become a brain surgeon than a NBA player, so isnt it more logical that the professional athlete get paid more than a brain surgeon?

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Global Monetary Depression Essay -- World History, Chinese Economy

Whether or not one believes that the 17th century world-wide monetary depression actually occurred or if there even was a general crisis to begin with, it has been widely apparent that from 1601 to 1680, a transformation in economic recital and a decline in transnational finance was underway. We cannot mistakenthough richly diverse the economya specific geographical region as if it fiscally rose or declined in isolation. Comparative studies are crucial however, it is yet another argument against the narrow parochialism which still afflicts the teaching of history in too many universities (Aston 3). Those of us who have suffered while studying the Western past must not plummet into the similarly devastating Asian gillyflower therefore, while juxtaposing the two influential economies of the 17th century, Europe (Spain) and Asia (China), it is crucial to bear in mind the transnational fluctuations in domestic and oversea trade with regards to the global consequences monetary inflati on. Unlike their European counterpart, Chinese feudalism consisted of peasants, especially in the late Ming and early Qing, that were not directly tied to landlordsrather, their atypical Chinese socioeconomic feudalism was more of a commercialized peasant economy where market imports were driven by the demands of the general public (Kishimoto-Nakayama 228). On the surface, an unfathomable torrent of unseasoned World silver deposits controlled by Spain alleviated much of the amounting debt and dissolved the liquidity crisis in Europe however, it also unleashed a devastating increase of bullion in Chinas over-heated economy which demoted global price levels on silverleading to the deleterious monetary inflation (Glahn 429). Since the source of profit from... ...y-rocketed levels of international trade, political sympathies spending, and populationthe main reason for Chinas financial inflation was due to global climatic changes that diminished agricultural yields, caused outbreaks of epidemic and ultimately depreciated the purchasing value of money by increasing market prices of staple goods. In this same context, despite the fact that one nations economy was in decline, it did not Moreover, the instance of Chinas financial crisis during the 17th century demonstrates the ultimate full scale of changes in a global economy and with reckon to environmental factors. The significant economic downturns during the period brought to light the constantly shifting organizations of the first markets during the modern era and the indigenous demands for natural resources which determined the direction of a countrys economic stability.

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Charles Dickens - Depiction of the Hard Lives of Children :: European Literature

Every author has a certain theme to all of their novels, no matter how different they may be one can always see something within a story that links to another one of the authors stories. The themes are also different for severally author, some being happiness where the characters have good luck, while other novels are sadder, and have darker themes to them. One author who has a darker theme that is connected through with(predicate) his books is Charles Dickens the theme that can be found in or so of his novels is one where the main character is mostly a child and they are release through a voiceless time in their life, but how he knew about the hard lives of children has been wondered about before and there is proof that he every had done research on it or experienced the oppression himself in his own life.Great Expectations was written in the 1800s and has escalated to the point of being one of Dickens most well-known novels. In the novel the main character, Pip, is a child wh ose parents had died when he was younger. So he is forced to live with his older child, Dickens gives the impression that Pips sister actually hates her younger brother she also beats him repeatedly with The Tickler when she sees that he has been disobedient. The only friend he truly has at the beginning is Mr. Joe, his sisters married man who is also oppressed by his wife. Even Mrs. Joes friends oppresses Pip when they all come over for dinner, talking about him as if he doesnt exist or that he isnt there. As the story goes on he receives word that he will be sent to Miss Havishams house to play. Pips life changes throughout the story, the boy acquire some good fortunes and some bad ones as well. (Dickens, 1999)Another one of Dickens more famous stories in which the child character goes through a hard life is Oliver Twist. In this novel the boy, Oliver, is an orphan who is raised in a corrupt environment until he met his aunt. His mother had died when she was giving birth so he h ad no relatives other than his aunt. The orphanage he had lived at was abusive, and after asking for more food one time he was sold to an abusive man. He eventually ran away and joined