In Brian Stelter's essay, "We Are the 99 Percent", he illustrates that the greater part of Americans are the 99 percent which is middle and lower class. The 1 percent of the Americans are the upper class which is the wealthier ones. Brian also states "The slogan became a national shorthand for the income disparity" (679). Brian consolidates an informal tone, examples of how the people look at the 99 percent versus the 1 percent protest, and the structure of how his essay is setup. Brian doing this, helps the reader get a better interruption of the essay. Brian applies an informational tone within his essay and he uses examples from many different sources to help relay his message about the protest. His tone is informal because he tends to use initialisms in some examples and some of the examples in the essay are informal. For example, of an informal tone, The American Revolution slogan was "Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death" (681). The tone is also informal due to the fact of the use of second person pronouns, "What Percent Are You?" (680). The essay is informal due to Brian not stating his …show more content…
For instance, "We are getting nothing," read the Tumblr blog We Are the 99 Percent, which helped popularize the percentages, "while the other 1 percent is getting everything" (679). There are many other examples in Brian's essay that says the 1 percent has it better than the 99 percent. Such as in Brian's essay a craigslist ad for a three-bedroom apartment Brooklyn has the come-on, "live like the 1 percent!" (680). On the other hand, of the 99 percent, there are so many homeless and college students that may or may not help the taxpayers according to Ms. Jardin (682). She also stated that only 53 percent of the 99 percent paid federal taxes (682). According to Newt Gingrich the "concept of the 99 percent and the 1 percent," are both divisive and Un-American