<u>Cartoonist Scott Adams, author of the Dilbert comic, writes of "cubicle cities," large areas with innumerable employees packed into individual workspaces separated by partial walls. In this workplace design</u>, density is increased. He writes in a satirical, often sarcastic, way about the social and psychological landscape of workers (white-collar) in modern business corporations. The Dilbert series came to national prominence through the downsizing period in 1990s America and was then distributed worldwide.
<em>Dilbert is the main character in the strip (a stereotypical technically-minded single male). He is a skilled engineer but has a poor social and romantic life.</em>
America has always stood out as the "free conutry". We are the only country to really have true freedom of speech. In the Texas vs. Johnson case, the court ruled that even something as controversial as burning the flag was still free speech. In other countries at the time, for example China, had just ruled that peaceful protesters could be killed.
Answer:
just write some chezzy stuff like " I agree with this because The scenes of chaos at the Capitol show a dark side to America that does not show our charitable and calm, orderly side- the side we want people to look up to and not the rebelling that happened on that chaotic day." U can expand if u agree w/ this but it depends on what u think America's side really is.