In this essay about the article redacted by Reese Jones Why to Build a Border Wall? different aspects will be presented. A summary of the topic will be presented to explain what the author is trying to communicate and his point of view in his article. Also, a rhetorical and ideas critique along with a personal reflection will be presented. This article is about the purpose of border walls and their benefits from dividing two different places. In the rhetorical critique, his appeal to ethos, logos, and pathos will be identified and explained briefly, also, in the ideas critique, his ideas will be critiqued to support a different point of view.
Carloads, caravans, homeless and hungry; twenty thousand and fifty thousand and a hundred thousand and two hundred thousand. They streamed over the mountains, hungry and restless—restless as ants, scurrying to find work to do—to lift, to push, to pull, to pick, to cut—anything, any burden to bear, for food. The kids are hungry. We got no place to live. Like ants scurrying for work, for food, and most of all for land.”
The mother wept as she watched her son walk away into the fog. She knew the war would take his life, as it had her husband. During the American REvolution, times were hard for many colonial families. Families were torn apart, divided by their belief and choices. Generations clashed.
“My father, with tears in his eyes, tried to smile as one friend after another grasped his hand in a last farewell. Mama was overcome with grief. At last we were all in the wagons. The drivers cracked their whips. The oxen moved slowly forward and the long journey had begun.”
The child gave a loud screech and sat next to a tree. He stopped moving” (94). Being a witness to pure terror, violence, and suffering is not something residents of Sterling, Illinois experience often; when they do it is not on the same level as other parts of the world. Beah remembers this because it traumatized him, and it reminds readers of how fortunate citizens of the United States really are. Naivety is a major weakness of fortunate people, and being blind to the horrors surrounding them is ignorance.
we heard a howl of humiliation that echoes across two centuries of dispossession, injustice, suffering and survival,” alluding to the concept of community and
The piece is organized such a way that it leads the reader to forming an emotional connection with the Refuge, making them value and want to protect it. It begins with the President sharing a personal anecdote,
“When human lives are endangered, when human dignity is in jeopardy, national borders
Tragedy is often thought to be synonymous with despair, confusion, and pain. When tragedy strikes, it brings heartache to the surrounding community and in the immediate aftermath of the attack, everyone is hurting. But then, just as the dust begins to settle, and the shock of the event has passed through our systems, we unite in unimaginable ways shouting phrases of patriotism, nationalism, and solidarity. “United We Stand” swept through the streets of New York City and across America after the terrorist attacks of 9/11, “Boston Strong” was heard throughout the Boston area and tweeted all over social media following the Boston Marathon bombing, and “Je Suis Charlie” was shouted in many rallies throughout France following the terrorist attack
Chris Hedges, a former war correspondent, has a memory overflowing with the horrors of many battlefields and the helplessness of those trapped within them. He applies this memory to write War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, where he tutors us in the misery of war. To accomplish this goal, Hedges uses impactful imagery, appeals to other dissidents of war and classic writers, and powerful exemplification. Throughout his book, Hedges batters the readers with painful and grotesque, often first-hand, imagery from wars around the globe. He begins the book with his experience in Sarajevo, 1995.
However, during the war was insufferable. This time left nothing but the skeletons of flourishing villages, and no food providers whatsoever. When one is starving and left nothing to eat but crow that oddly fell from the sky, then the boys must perform such uncivilized acts like these to survive. Work: A Long Way Gone Thematic Subject: Sacrifice
"The war in Vietnam had taken everything from us - our home, our family, our future. We were starting from scratch in a strange new country, with nothing but the clothes on our backs. " this quote highlights the hardship experienced by refugees who have to start their lives over from scratch in a new country. This conveys the sense of loss and dislocation felt by refugees and how his family had to restart their
This sentence delivers a depressing and pessimistic mood, using three different descriptions portray his father’s figure in Flynn’s life, and each of them reinforces themselves. The sentences are short and to the point, and some sentences are even fragmented. “Many fathers are gone. Some leave, some are left,” Flynn writes. (23)
I continue listening. As he spills his inner repressed memories, “15 years… 15 years of blood and hate” Buildings that once stood graciously in the sky, now punctured by the bullets that continuously dance in midair. Streets that were once filled with jubilant people, now only hosted lifeless cold corpses. Men grew distant from their families, forcing women to carry lethal arms to shield their broods.
In order for a harmonious relationship between the people and the government be established, laws are promulgated. Laws are also enacted for the purpose of meeting the needs of the people, and for the reason of maintaining peace and security in a certain society. Legislators are burdened with the responsibility of knowing what their constituents need in order to have an efficient execution of their service to the public. They enact laws in order to advance the protection and welfare of their people. However, problem arises when law enforcement is not properly executed.