Storyline
				
				Across the United States and the United Kingdom, economic 
				policies that were set in place decades ago continue to harbor a 
				growing wedge between the wealthy and the poor. 
				 
				
				The ambitious 
				two-part documentary The Divide introduces us to seven 
				citizens who have experienced the effects of this disparity 
				firsthand.
				
				Though the film includes archived news footage related to 
				several key economic milestones,
				
					
				
				
				...among them.
				 
				
				It is by no means a 
				dry lesson in government policy. 
				 
				
				Instead, the 
				filmmakers focus almost exclusively on the human side of the 
				equation.
				
				In New York City, a psychologist serves the mental health needs 
				of Wall Street's most successful movers and shakers. 
				 
				
				Not content to teach 
				or open a practice for less privileged clients - where his 
				salary might be limited to a mere $100,000 a year - he now lives 
				the high life, or at least works hard at maintaining the 
				appearance that he is.
				
				A small business owner was forced to close her shop after a 
				Walmart was erected nearby. Later, she procured 
				employment from that same Walmart that put her out of business.
				
				 
				
				Over the years, she's 
				detected a depressing change in corporate culture. 
				 
				
				Employees are pushed 
				to their limits, no longer recognized for their hard work as 
				they once were, and the company leaders are less willing to 
				share the fruits of their success.
				
				Through these and other portraits, we understand the 
				psychological and societal implications of wealth inequality 
				between the haves, the have nots, and those who are 
				trying to break from one social status to the other. 
				 
				
				This dynamic is 
				especially profound in the story of Jen, a mother from 
				Sacramento, California who lives in a luxury gated community.
				
				 
				
				She doesn't know her 
				neighbors, and she can frequently feel them judging her based on 
				the type of car she drives and her willingness to do her own 
				yard work.
				
				Economic inequality is currently at its highest level since 
				1928. 
				 
				
				The Divide 
				mourns the passing of a way of life that is no longer simple, 
				balanced or just, and which now values the facade of success 
				over all else.
				
				
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