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Wall Street Money Never Sleep Rhetorical Analysis

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1. Give a brief synopsis of the movie – Wall Street Money Never Sleeps. The movie is about greed, and how people are inadvertently led and swayed to wanting more and more, even going to the extent of over-lending. This subsequently leads to important role-players in the movie who are successful in the stock exchange, and to what lengths greed entices and expunges a person’s moral character in order to amass an untold amount of wealth be it done legally or illegally. In addition to this, we see that love and family takes a back seat to the love of money, and it exposes one to the reality of not only an industry but a society where money is everything even at the cost of everyone else. Revenge is also a recurring theme in the movie, and this …show more content…

Discuss the symbolism of the motor bike race between Jacob and Brenton James. In my opinion the symbolism of this motor bike race is very strong to the recurring themes throughout the movie, of ethics/morality vs greed, whereby each (Jacob and Brenton) represent each of these, and ultimately the result ends up where with enough drive and motivation, each individual comes into their own in life, and how one realizes that certain truths in life have more value than one’s bank balance, and how one always reaps what one sows. 10. When governments are asked to bail out financial institutions, “nationalisation” comes to mind. Do you think it is ethical to use public money to aid failing private institutions? Motivate your answer. In my opinion I think that is extremely unethical for public monies to aid failing institutions, as this then gives the government or public companies the right to determine who fails and who succeeds, and in my opinion this is detrimental to a democratic country, to its workers, it is a constitutional crisis, as it eventually affects each and every citizen of the country, but more so the working class as well as the poor as it reverts to a nationalism bureaucracy which in term sends out a message to the people that owning any private property is an unsafe choice, and this results in the populace becoming distrustful, it empowers unemployment by limiting private profitability of companies and this has a ripple effect on consumers, the workforce and eventually the economy as a whole, and can lead to recessions in the long

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