The company shall issue you with the appropriate PPE, the basic provision would consist of safety footwear and safety helmet to protect your feet and head respectively from falling objects, Hi visibility clothing to been clearly seen. These are the basic PPE normally worn when on site in accordance with legislation and organisational requirements.…
On May 10, 1940, Winston Churchill became British Prime Minister. On May 13, he presented his angle on acquiring victory “at all costs”, and some contend that this “Blood, Toil, Tears, and Sweat speech is what made his career. This speech was given by Churchill on his entrance into the House of Commons with the presence of the outgoing prime minister. There has been controversy surrounding his intense speech regarding the multiple ultra-nationalistic statements he makes, however in this quote, he poses the effective idea that victory must be attained at all costs, even in spite of “terror”, and it is apparent that his intentions regarding his speech are to let the people of Great Britain know that he is dedicated to serving his country and…
As we discussed in class, Winston Churchill has made many pivotal decisions that have resulted in failure. In January of 1915, he sent over 100 ships to set sail for one of the largest invasions, but it failed miserably. It resulted in the deaths of 56,000 allied troops and nearly 200,000 were either missing or injured. Churchill was ordered to resign but after a long break he returns to the government, stronger than ever. He never lost his enthusiasm even when he was asked to leave, and because of that he became even more successful. To go along with the historical significance of this quote, there is also an appreciable personal significance. This quote can be applied to anyone's life. It shows how everyone should persevere and never give up. Also that everyone should try their hardest and never lose faith, just as Churchill…
In a document associated with chapter twenty eight; Martin Luther King writes a letter in Birmingham to inform the clergymen of the reasons for his actions. Throughout this document there is a reoccurring theme of dedication, determination, and enlightenment.…
This questionnaire called the VARK shows different learning styles a person can have when answering the questions provided. There are different varieties of learning styles and after taking the questionnaire, the results were multimodal. Multimodal learning style is combination of visual, aural, kinesthetic and read/write, which provides the choices of two or more modes to use while studying. Multimodal is in the majority for 60 percent of the population. (Fleming, 2011). Throughout the paper, this writer’s preferred learning style would be discuss along with preferred learning strategies and compared to the strategies provided from the questionnaire. It will also appraise any changes that need to be made to enhance the learning ability.…
Translation: The King has called the Government leaders together in unusual and uncomfortable places, far from any legal resources or Public Records for the sole purpose of making them so tired and uncomfortable, they will simply agree with King and do…
(2)The quote above is in the introduction, "The Statue That Didn't Look Right". The quote if in between the end of three of the author's examples of rapid cognition and right before the author admits that snap decisions can also betray us sometimes. It represents the introductory tone of "The Statue That Didn't Look Right and of the entire book itself. (3)The quote's significance…
1- “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed.”…
This passage related to the overall message of the book because it shows how war can leave you with a lot less then you went in with and how its not worth it at all.…
Second, he unites the people by creating a common enemy. He uses the metaphor, “remember that, in the past, those who foolishly sought power by riding the back of the tiger ended up inside”, to describe the ways other countries were trying to “gain power”. The tiger riding is compared to the nuclear weapons. He uses tiger riding because it is also risky, reflecting on having nuclear weapons and threatening to use, which can lead to war. Basically saying that using nuclear weapons to try and intimidate with them was foolish. Later in the speech he uses parallelism saying, Let both sides explore what problems unite us…Let both sides, for the first time, formulate serious and precise proposals for the inspection and control of arms…Let both sides seek to invoke the wonders of…
“In the following pages I offer nothing more than simple facts, plain arguments, and common sense: and have no other preliminaries to settle with the reader, than that he will divest himself to prejudice and prepossession, and suffer his reason and his feelings to determine for themselves: that he will put on, or rather that he will not put off, the true character of a man, and generously enlarge his views beyond the present days…”…
There have been two major incidents in which two presidents, George W. Busch and Franklin O. Roosevelt, have made War speechs about taking drastic actions. Bush's speech entitled "Freedom and Fear are at War" spoken on September 20, 2001, and Roosevelts speech "Declaration of War," spoken on December 8, 1941, have both very unique strategys that are of genius. To compare and analyze their strategys, you have to understand what they are saying.…
Taking immediate action when confronted with an overbearing task creates a better opportunity for achieving that goal. Both Thoreau and King assert their reasons for acting now rather than later; it is that of not waiting for a tomorrow that is never promised. These men together feel humiliated by their people and their own current positions; moreover, they have to acknowledge the circumstances that have limited others’ dreams. These men, together, are cognizant of the sacrifice that must be made to achieve ultimate victory; whereby they would prefer for these visions, of a castle in the sky, to be manifested in their life time. Thoreau asserts his opinion on this topic, when stating, “But to speak practically and as a citizen, unlike those who call themselves no-government men, I ask for, not at once no government, but at once a better government”(Thoreau 92): here by, concluding he doesn’t want to wait for the government to change. Along with Thoreau,…
The first of the three main points is the “It’s not what you say, it’s what people hear” mantra. This statement is repeated numerous times to reinforce the central theme of the book. He uses examples such as Jimmy Carter’s “infamous ‘malaise’ speech.” The author points out that although the former president never uttered the word “malaise,” people recognize the speech in question as such. President Carter was actually talking about America’s “crisis of confidence” not expressing his “malaise” about the crisis. Another example is when former secretary of state Colon Powell spoke of the need for “decisive force” to win every war that America engages. However, the American people translated this in to “overwhelming force” which is nearly the opposite of what Colon Powell meant. He meant for a surgical and precise type of force. While this can be overwhelming to an enemy, the latter has a connotation of vast numbers of soldiers and a violent onslaught to which the enemy eventually succumbs. To summarize, the author backs up his mantra with multiple real world examples.…
He achieved this through his utilization of logos and pathos. When Chamberlain said “If out of the struggle we again re-establish in the world the rules of good faith and the renunciation of force, why then even the sacrifices that will be entailed upon us will find their fullest justification”, he gives good moral reasons why the British must enter the conflict against the Nazi’s. He describes the Nazi’s again by using logos and pathos, saying, “As long as that Government exists and pursues the methods it has so persistently followed during the last two years, there will be no peace in Europe. We shall merely pass from one crisis to another, and see one country after another attacked by methods which have now become familiar to us in their sickening technique”. He explains that the effect of letting the German people do as they please is that Europe will be plunged into years of struggle, with violence and plagues of death being the toll. Chamberlain needed the emotional support of his citizens. He used pathos in this address to win their trust. He gains his audience back by using pathos and reminding them of grim times, such as World War One, it is still fresh in nearly every ones minds. Chamberlain says, “The thoughts of many of us must at this moment inevitably be turning back to 1914, and to a…