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    century in 1998. In this essay Mckibben aims to convince his readers that having one child doesn’t mean that you’re child will follow the single child stereotype‚ and that the environmental status of our planet will worsen if we continue to have a growing population. "If we keep heating the planet at our current pace‚ the seas will rise two feet in the next century.” Personal anecdotes‚ and using and assertive serious tone are techniques McKibben used to develop a convincing essay. Mckibben begins

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    Rhetorical Analysis Essay: 2008 AP Question 2 John M. Barry argues that scientists need to embrace uncertainty within the passage; he asserts that they need the courage and will to overcome the intimidating uncertainty of exploring new fields. With an honest and clear tone Barry highlights the divide between certainty and uncertainty in the passage‚ discussing the importance of “pioneers”‚ individuals who are willing to adventure into the unexplored to further their researches. Courage and wit

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    Lincoln Rhetorical Analysis To ensure the unification and positive future that Lincoln envisions for the country‚ he abets everyone to unite and make peace. Lincoln also summarizes the civil war and the negative outcomes that they need to overcome through directness‚ comparisons‚ parallelism and tone. Lincoln achieves directness by saying there is less occasion for an extended address than there was at the first‚ to introduce his speech. His ability to be direct shows the people it is ostensible

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    different styles of rhetorical elements in dialogue‚ Coppola was able to effectively portray the post-colonialism oppression against immigrants while explaining the necessary respect when dealing with the Italian mafia in order to achieve an effective argument in this situation. When looking at American history‚ it becomes clear that immigrants came into America in waves and were discriminated against‚ due to the immense size of these immigration waves. During the early 1800’s‚ Italy had the largest

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    WIght 8 May 2015 Rhetorical Analysis Reflections: Richard Rodriguez I struggle with Rhetorical Analysis essays‚ but this particular paper seemed to puzzle me more than the other rhetorical analysis essays that I have come across this year. The score I received was an 8‚ and I was honestly quite surprised to see that. I knew I had written a paper to pass‚ but to show that I had sufficiently written the paper shocked me. This essay was tough in particular because the rhetorical strategies were very

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    food for the population and with the processes tomato market is international‚ with increasing pressure from Italy‚ China‚ and Mexico (Bittman‚ 2013)‚ the question of how can they produce so much food at a timely rate‚ yet make sure it had nutrition?. We are surrounded with the Mid Wests idea of farming with overcrowding animals in pens‚ and crops used for junk food‚ fuel‚ and used for the animals to feed them with. Canned tomatoes and fresh market tomatoes are grown the same way‚ canned ones just have

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    supplements that people take is just a big waste of money. Mike Tanier also argues that there is a lot more we don’t know about supplements than what we actually do know. For instance‚ even though we do not know how big the supplement industry is‚ we have a good estimate but do not know how many athletes use them‚ we do not know who is in charge‚ we do not know what these products actually do to our body‚ we don’t know what is contained in the bottles. The author also stresses how all these supplements

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    Earvin “Magic” Johnson Born Earvin Johnson Jr. on August 14‚ 1959‚ in Lansing‚ Michigan‚ Magic Johnson dominated the court as one of America’s best basketball players for 12 years. He retired from the LA Lakers in 1991 after revealing that he had the AIDS virus. He has since then built up a business empire‚ which includes real estate holdings‚ several Starbucks franchises‚ and movie theaters. He is also an author and has written several books including this autobiography titled “Magic.” I was

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    Have you ever wondered what it would be like to be a slave? I think it would be horrifying. Martin Luther King Jr. wanted everyone to have the same dream of freedom and equality for everyone that he had. SO that we may all have the privilege to live a free and normal life in the future. MLK’s speech was very compelling because he used such wonderful grammar and sentence structure that it gave him authority and credibility. Martin Luther King Jr. tried to replace violence and hatred with lovet

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    privacy and how America has reacted to the addition and deduction of privacy. Franzen makes a very convincing case that we were overreacting in a big way to our fears that we would lose our privacy. He uses a mixture of sentence structure which helps to raise your thought on the subject‚ and then answer the short sentence with an explanation in a longer one. Throughout this essay‚ we see much of Franzen’s sarcastic ways which helps to give a lightened mood to this very serious topic. He made it

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