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The Patriot Rhetorical Analysis

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The Patriot Rhetorical Analysis
Foreword- Every time Michael wakes up he goes and gets his slaves to make sure they are working by the time he’s up. And if they are not he really hurts them and it’s not fair to the slaves and he is very hard on them. He doesn’t pay them anything even though he is one of the most richest Americans. He owns 100 slaves, 3 houses, and 10 plantations, and has 600 million dollars. At auctions he spends lots of money on these slaves and he purposely separates people from their families cause he is just an evil rich person. He hates slaves and black people and if he ever sees a black person by his house walking around or looking suspicious he takes them and makes them work for him, it is very harsh. The slaves hate him but have no choice but to follow …show more content…
That their are safe houses and routes to take to get to the North. The men listened to the woman and her husband and they followed the route to the North. The men were running through the dark gloomy woods when they hear a man go “hey get over here,” and they just kept running and running and got out of site of the man. The next morning the men ended up in the North and escaped and were now free. Trey and the rest of the men met some people in the North and explained their story to them, and what had happened to other slaves that were on his plantation, and that Michael the slave owner was the meanest man they’ve ever seen and they explained what he did to slaves that didn’t listen. The people Trey and the rest of the men met helped them start a new life and get them started in a new life of freedom and decisions that they can make on their own and not be told what to do like Michael would do when they were slaves. All in all, these men were now free and were very satisfied, for how they got free, and they fought very hard for that freedom and they believed in

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