Imagine a woman desperately scrounging for crumbs in the cupboards of her kitchen. Her face sunken with grief as she looks for anything that might quell the pleas of her starving son. Her search turns up empty-handed, and she is then forced to either let her child go hungry or find another means of obtaining food. Many scenarios like this can be found in Gerry Smith’s “How a Government Computer Glitch Forced Thousands of Families to go Hungry. It is an article about a recent event occurring back around 2010 of how faulty programs provided by the Accenture Company left many families without food on the table. Not only were food stamps affected by their flawed programing, but so were other welfare applications regarding insurances. While the topic of the core reading is interesting enough on its own the author uses a number of methods to keep the reader’s attention. Through the use of rhetorical appeals the author plays off the sympathy and moral of his audience by providing examples of individuals affected by the lack of food stamps, pointing out the lack of effort put toward computer programs designated for use by the poor, and by calling North Carolina out for its many technological problems.…
The influence of gender is when someone of the opposite gender causes someone to act a certain way or make a decision based on what they think. In The Bass, The River, and Sheila Mant, a young boy and girl, named Sheila, are impacted with impressing the opposite gender. The author, W. D. Wetherell, touches on peer pressure and the influence of gender and how they cause the boy to make a bad decision. People always make decisions or act a certain way caused by the influence of the opposite gender. He feels he needs to impress Sheila, which causes him to make a poor decision that he regrets.…
In Carl Safina’s writings of Song for the Blue Ocean, he reflects on his and others take on what is currently going on to the salmon across the Northwest. As you can clearly see from his writing he truly admires this animal and so do many of the people he introduces us to. He shares with us the ridicule’s many industries, whom are harming the salmon have laid plainly before us and we fall for without any second thought.…
I am reading “The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant” by W.D Wetherell. This is a story about a 14 year old boy who has a crush on a girl named Sheila. He asks her out and there going on a date in a boat and he figures out she doesn’t like fishing and he loves it so does he pick the bass or the girl. In this journal I will be questioning if he picks the girl or the bass.…
A wise man once said , “ It is impossible to defeat an ignorant man in an argument”. According to the article, “ How Tap Water Became Toxic in flint, Michigan “ , by Sara Ganim and Linh Tran they discuss the problem with residents from Michigan unable to obtain clean fresh water. It has left the majority of residents furious and left many with unanswered questions. Such as, when will they have healthy safe water and when will they receive clean water for the money they are paying for? However, while the mayor is ignoring the problem the residents who reside in Michigan are being affected with having health issues.…
There are perhaps no days of our childhood we lived so fully as those we spent with a favorite book.” This is a famous quote said by Marcel Proust. Books over the centuries have had an influential impact on the lives of many. Arguably, there are none more influential than children’s books. Children’s books contain important life lessons and teach many children the basic values they will hold for the remainder of their lives. Examples of the best range from the well-known Dr. Seuss books, to the always-popular Winnie the Pooh books. Although those are historically popular, The Rainbow Fish, by Marcus Pfister, is one that should be kept in mind. With it’s enticing illustrations, simple and descriptive context, and lesson it portrays, the children’s book The Rainbow Fish by Marcus Pfister should be considered for a spot on the “Top 100 Children’s Books” list.…
As sad as it is to say social inequality, racism, wealthy individuals, politics, corporations, and greed all benefited from the Flint Michigan water crisis. As there was zero social order in the decisions being made over the years to fix the issue, and instead the problem only kept getting worse. As our lecture stated, Conflict theorist see “society as different institutions competing for resources”, and describing the problem through the eyes of Conflict theorist, Flint Michigan’s water crisis is a perfect example of: social inequality, greed, and racism negatively effecting society. From the lack of effect given by the state government to fix the issue to corporations taking short cuts to save money. The Flint Michigan water crisis was the…
Change began when nearly a century ago, when 125-foot high Condit Dam was constructed on the White Salmon River to provide cheap electricity in a region hungry for industrial development. The decision to block the White Salmon River for hydropower came at a price; the abundant salmon, steelhead, and lamprey that once returned there were lost. Also lost were the tribal fisheries and cultural activities that are inseparable from the presence of these foods. All life is intertwined.…
The article “River Plan Too Fishy For My Tastebuds” by Bill McEwen shows how the River Restoration Project is flawed in so many ways. McEwen proves to be more credible because he has worked for the Fresno Bee for 35 years and that shows he is very professional. This article was published by the Fresno Bee. The Fresno Bee receives an average of 8.6 million pageviews a month. The article was propagated in the six-county region of Fresno, Fresno is one of the fastest growing regions in California. There typical readers are farmers and poor people. The Fresno Bee cares more about the environment and the people. I disagree with the River Restoration Project because it isn’t worth the costs. It isn’t worth the costs because it is a project that will take many years to get started and it will worsen California's drought problem. This article by McEwen captures his take on ethos, pathos and logo by stating that several experts and .…
Over fishing has led to an almost complete wipe out of the mature cod population in the area of Northern Europe. With lack of regulations, the world could witness an entire species of fish destroyed due to rational behavior of man to want more. This is a classic example of a “commons” which Garrett Hardin discusses in his essay “The Tragedy of the Commons” (Hardin, 1968). The North Atlantic Cod is a natural resource that, although regulated minutely, is being overfished and exploited. Even though the fishing industry is an important industry that feeds many third world countries and provides income to most of those countries also, allowing the exploitation is unacceptable. Today’s society is not effectively reducing or efficiently stopping the damage that is being done to the populations and environment. In order to solve the problem of over fishing cod in the Northern Atlantic we must apply a combination of technical and ethical solutions. I would have the United Nations pass specific laws regulating major fish populations which could be an extension of the Third Committee: Social, Cultural, and Humanitarian or (SOCHUM) of the United Nations. I would also have specific incentives put up by SOCHUM to promote research into developing more widespread aquacultures and better fishing technology that better targets older species of fish.…
The story of the Pacific salmon is a tragic one. Humans have consistently created conditions that threaten the livelihood of the salmon. Yet the salmon continue to fight despite the assault that has taken place on their habitat for over 150 years. In Salmon Without Rivers, Jim Lichatowich (1999) explores this assault as well as discusses man’s attempt to restore salmon to the Pacific Northwest. His detailed analysis of the history of the Pacific salmon sheds light on the plight of the salmon and the response by man to the salmon crisis in the Pacific.…
In the United States, about, “45.3 million” people live in poverty (Current). A man by the name of Matthew O’Brien wrote an article called Poverty Is Literally Making People Sick Because They Can’t Afford Food, published in 2014 in the Atlantic. He argues that the poor people are becoming sick due to their inability to pay for their necessities. Necessities such as food. O’Brien starts out with his article connecting himself to his readers, then he uses reputable sources, citing statistics, and talking about possible solutions in helping poor Americans. O’Brien uses rhetorical situation, audience, and genre, pathos, logos, and ethos in order to make an strong article about what poor Americans are facing because they can’t afford to buy food. One of his solutions is to have an increase in government resources for the poor.…
Singer, P. (Spring 1972). Famine, Affluence, and Morality. Philosophy and Public Affairs, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 229-243 [revised edition]. Retrieved from http://www.utilitarian.net/singer/by/1972----.htm…
“We as human and as a person have the knowledge and infrastructure to see that no family and no child ever go hungry of food deprivation in the United States. With Food insecurity people lack sustainable economic access to enough safe, nutritious, and socially acceptable food for a healthy and productive life. Humans are suffering due to Lack of sustainable nutritious and socially acceptable food for a healthy and productive life.”…
The Bass, The River, and Sheila Mant is a short story about lost love, realization, moving on, but most of all, letting go of what you love. The readers follow along as our fourteen-year-old narrator falls for 17 year-old Sheila Mant during a Vermont summer. The author reveals the theme throughout the use of characterization, plot, irony, imagery, and many more. Throughout the story, the narrator is trying to woo Sheila and takes her on a boat ride up to a concert. But, just as things were going swimmingly, our narrator realizes he didn't pull up his line he has under the boat. This normally wouldn't have been a problem, as he would usually have been able to reel it in, but everything changed after Sheila said that she didn't like fishing.…