Montresor is considered an unreliable narrator because his opinion of Fortunato is biased. ... In addition, readers do not have any background on Montresor, so Montresor's sanity is questionable, considering he formulates and carries out an elaborate plan to entomb and murder someone who insulted him.
It all depends on which American Dream you're talking about.
When I Google the American Dream, a website defines it as "...the belief that anyone, regardless of where they were born or what class they were born into, can attain their own version of success in a society where upward mobility is possible for everyone."
This isn't true. It just isn't.
In a perfect world, the dream itself doesn't change, but the rules we have in place to keep specific groups of people lower than others do. I personally believe it can't. I do think it is achievable without hard work; specifically if you aren't a minority, and born into a rich family. But, this is just my personal opinion.
The answer is: A. The wealthy take enormous advantage of the poor.
In the excerpt from "A Modest Proposal," Jonathan Swift makes use of irony and suggests cooking children to improve Ireland's economy and decrease overpopulation. Actually, Swift intends to urge wealthy landowners to take action, since he believes they are reponsible for depriving the poor Irish people of positive human qualities.
A, it shows the illustration and the claim that helps teens find jobs.