5. Write an argument about one factual matter you are confident--based on personal experience or your state of knowledge--that most people get wrong, time and again. Use your expertise to correct this false impression. I work at Starbucks as a barista and when I first started, I asked my manager every question I could come up with regarding safety and health standards. As a result, I am very well rounded when it comes to health standards and as a barista I have become food safety certified in the State of Florida. Whenever there is a dispute about whether something is QASA (the organization that does our audits) correct, I always look it up and find the correct way of handling the situation. At many stores I have worked at, including my …show more content…
Out of curiosity I looked up his eulogy (I had cried when he passed away) and found that his daughter, who was eight years old at the time, wrote a eulogy for him. Bindi’s eulogy for her father was, of course, adorable, and very moving. The fact that she presented it was very emotional. Bindi makes many claims about her father in this eulogy. As a child, she doesn’t give many examples to follow them with, but knowing how Steve lived his life every individual who heard her knew them to be true based on his actions. She did a great job displaying his love of animals and focus on his family. She began her argument explaining how he was good to her. She began with the claim “my daddy was my hero” and followed with reasons why (no examples, but still reasons). He was always present in her life and spent plenty of time with her. She also acknowledges his “important job”. She claimed that Steve’s goal with building the Australia Zoo and his work on animal preservation was intended to “change the world so everyone would love wildlife like he did.” Knowing the life of Irwin, he definitely accomplished this. She explained that she shared similar goals with her father and encouraged others to learn from his passions and care for