This sure looks
like class warfare to me, and there's no question which class is winning.
Not exact matches
@Christian Right: You forgot how us poor people are waging
class warfare on all the job creators while we enjoy luxuries
like our refrigerator and microwave.
I thought the great depression was due to our government jumping in and messing up banks with crazy regulations (
like everyone should qualify to have a home)... Nice try again promoting
class warfare CNN... If anything has to be preached it is to tell the govt to get out of america's business
«It goes back to hypocrite Kathy Hochul, who is running a divisive
class warfare campaign, complaining about her term, millionaires billionaires and she's pretending to be this middle
class individual, that struggles
like most Americans, and she's not,» said Collins.
Whereas in «Deliverance», the person of perceived lower
class asserts his dominance by violating Bobby («squeal
like a pig») in the woods, therefore transforming
class struggle into
class warfare: Gina (Kiele Sanchez), a Georgian just
like the hicks in the Boorman film, intimidates Cliff and Cydney when the country woman processes a goat into food, where she violates the animal (that Nick, played by Timothy Olyphant, had slain) with her hands for its innards.
Damnation is not all bad, but it never shakes the feeling of being merely a shadow of other, more compelling series that deal with similar struggles of
class warfare, brotherhood, frontier spirit, and the
like.
It's the kind of weird, pretentious, not uninteresting mess you get when ambitious directors create original sci - fi works, with not - so - subtle references to
class warfare, social insularity, and big brother -
like government manipulation.
Gone is the subtlety, the nuance, the
class -
warfare jokes, the wit of the original show, instead replaced by pointless innuendos and a plot that demands every single character act
like a fool in order for it to make sense.
Jack and Thomas go at each
like a couple of intellects, but it's the
class warfare that stands out.
Here's what Wes Upton's lesson on trench
warfare looks
like: As soon as students take their seats, Upton asks them to answer a question on the five main causes of World War I to jog their memory on material they covered last
class.