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Watergate
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Watergate refers to the political scandal stemming from the 1972 burglary of the Democratic National Committee headquarters and the subsequent cover-up orchestrated by President Nixon and the White House. It is a core subject in American government, political science, and history courses because it raises fundamental questions about presidential power, institutional accountability, and public trust in elected officials. The scandal ultimately led to Nixon's resignation from the presidency, making it a singular moment in American political history and a recurring reference point for understanding the limits of executive authority.

Student papers on this topic approach Watergate from several distinct angles. Many focus on Nixon himself and the sequence of events leading from the burglary to his resignation. Others examine the broader cultural and political context by comparing the social climates of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Some papers analyze how the scandal reshaped presidential power, including arguments about the imperial presidency and efforts to renew executive authority afterward. Theoretical frameworks drawn from sociologists such as Emile Durkheim, Talcott Parsons, and J. Alexander also appear, applying social theory to political crisis. The role of investigative journalism and media in exposing the cover-up is another well-represented angle, as are downstream effects on campaign finance and public trust.

A strong essay on Watergate needs a focused thesis that moves beyond narrating events and instead argues a clear interpretive claim — about power, accountability, or lasting consequences. Evidence drawn from policy changes, media coverage, and public reaction carries the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating Watergate as an isolated incident rather than connecting it to longer patterns in American political culture and institutional reform.

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Paper Undergraduate
Bullshit by Harry G. Frankfurt
What is the difference between a liar and a bullshitter? According to On Bullshit, Princeton philosophy professor Harry G. Frankfurt's bluntly titled book, bullshitting is a performance, more than outright deception.
Paper Undergraduate
Woodstock Modern and Topical Interpretations
Modern and topical interpretations of the rock an roll era, including but not limited to the culminating events which played out at Woodstock, and its less well-known cousin Altamont are varied, demonstrating the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
the american presidency
¶ … American Presidency by McDonald takes a strong stand against the executive branch gaining too much power over the other branches of government. His basic thesis is that this Constitutional government is brilliantly…
Essay Undergraduate
American Psycho in His Seminal Work American
This essay compares the novel American Psycho with the story of John Wayne Gacy in order to understand the public perception of serial killers. Noting the similarities between the two killers allows one to understand how their success is dependent upon the society in which they find themselves. In turn, this allows one to better appreciate the social critique of the novel, which focuses on the way in which serial killers are essentially the natural progression of the dominant social ideals of American society.
Essay Doctorate
American Religious History Defining Fundamentalism and Liberalism
Defining fundamentalism and liberalism in Christianity is hardly an exact science, especially because prior to about 1920 there was not even a term for fundamentalism as it exists today.
Research Paper Doctorate
The Watergate Crisis
The Watergate scandal began with some confidential papers, bungling burglars, a preeminent hotel complex in Washington, D.C., and a trail of fraud leading directly to the Committee to Re-Elect President Richard M.
Paper Doctorate
Nixon and the Legacy of the War
This paper looks at two speeches by President Richard Nixon outlining the policy of the United States during the Vietnam War and the eventual peace accord and the testimony of John Kerry before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations in 1971. The lessons learned and the legacy of the conflict of the war in Vietnam is discussed.
Paper Doctorate
Generational Gap in the Workplace Contemporary Working
Contemporary working age Americans are categorized into four distinct generations that, allegedly, have been made into what they are and their personalities formed due to the socio-political and economic as well as historical occurrences of their age. These four generations are variously known as: Traditionals, Baby Boomers, Generation X, and Generation Y. (Kupperschmidt, 2000). There are at least two views regarding generational differences in the workplace. The first suggests that whilst individuals are distinct, nonetheless, shared generational values, events, beliefs, behaviors, and occurrences indelibly affected members of a particular generation and impact them from effective intergenerational communication (Zemke, et al. 2000). The other is that although, certain generational events do occur that influence people's behavior and beliefs, ultimately employees are constant and generic in what they seek from jobs and trying to categorize them and predict their performance according to generation category is misguided (Jotgensen, 2003; Yang & Guy, 2006). This essay dwells on and discusses the former suggestion.
Paper Undergraduate
U.S. Political, Economic, and Social Change 1941–1989
¶ … Coal mining in the United States [...] how World War II and the subsequent Cold War created economic, political, and social changes inside the United States between 1941 and 1989.
Research Paper Doctorate
Watergate; Views of Authors Such
Society is an organism that functions according to its own rules and has the interconnected mechanisms that allow it to regenerate just like a human body. The collective consciousness enables it to function properly.