![]() ![]() The story thereby demonstrates how capitalism may give employers an unethical amount of power over employees. Alsuga states, “We’ll need someone between a rock and a hard place” (7). By the time I got involved the kid was dead. ![]() Alsuga considers forcing an employee to violently retaliate against the vandals, he chooses an employee with a large family to support Mr. 26The reader questions the narrator of CivilWarLand when he denies his own responsibility in helping to cover up Sam’s murders of gang members and of a solitary candy thief: It doesn’t say anywhere thou shalt not bury some guy’s hand. Alsuga-is able to coerce his employees into unethical action because the employees are dependent on their paychecks. ![]() For example, in “CivilWarLand in Bad Decline,” the park’s unscrupulous owner-Mr. One of the ways in which some of these stories develop this critique is by examining dangerous disparities of wealth and power that capitalism may create. As is the case with much of Saunders’ work, some of the stories in this collection may be interpreted as critiques of capitalism, specifically relating to stories’ illustrations of capitalism’s frequent disregard for human wellbeing. ![]()
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