This week’s article, “Six Lies about the Marlins Stadiums,” by Elfrink unveils that the Marlins stadium used the taxpayers’ money unwisely. Simply maintaining this stadium costs more than what the Marlins stadium brings in. Thus, the Marlins Stadium has a low gross income, which is very problematic for the taxpayers, since they might be a certain way of using their money for that.
According to Jordan Rappaport and Chad Wilkerson in the article, “What Are the Benefits of Hosting a Major League Sports Franchise?” they illustrates the controversy on the amount spend on sport facilities. It is not fair for the taxpayers who generally do not benefit from these stadiums, however, there are positive aspects for the major league. The construction of enormous stadiums tell the public that will provide excellent jobs for local
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Hyperreality transpires when one models a real without origin or reality. In general, simulacra are copies that display not having an original to begin with. Then, simulation is the fake operation of how a real-world process spreads within time. In hyperreality it tends to collapse the distinction between representation mainly because there is the real and the imaginary of former models and simulated generation of difference. Thus, hyperrealities will not allows one to view the real world, since the individual is trapped in the lenses of symbolic hyper-realities. The difference between someone who feigns is faking an illness and someone who is simulates an illness one is produces the symptoms, which in essence creates the reality of having the illness. In essence, the human experience is a simulation of reality due to the fact society replaced reality with signs and symbols. In the daily one can see how society attempts to mold and shape are human experiences into what is suitable and what is true in