Answer:
Yes.
Explanation:
They were considered traitors because of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The government became worried that citizens of Japanese ancestry would act as spies or saboteurs or otherwise pose threats like espionage against America. At the time, nearly 120,000 people fell into this category. Around two-thirds of that number were full-fledged citizens (born and raised here) of the United States. But, anti-japanese propoganda that caused fear and suspicion among the public encouraged the Roosevelt administration to forcibly send them away from their homes (across the country) to the internment camps.
Answer: .Rhetoric
Explanation:
The term that is most closely related to Persuasion is Rhetoric. Rhetoric has to do with how a particular audience is informed and convinced with regards to certain situations.
Rhetoric involves the provision of heuristics that are required for the understanding, and the development of arguments.
Therefore, the correct option s D.
Answer:
Making mistakes is only human, and it is a good practice to forgive people. Explanation: classic example of ad hominem fallacy is given below: A: “All murderers are criminals, but a thief isn't a murderer, and so can't be a criminal.” B: “Well, you're a thief and a criminal, so there goes your argument.”
Oedipus was thrown away by his parents on his third day of life because it was told that he would kill his father and marry his mother. He didn’t die because instead of throwing the baby, a shepherd pitied him.
He grows up in Corinth but runs away from there thinking that he would prevent his fate from becoming reality.
Oedipus becomes a good king, he is concerned about the welfare of his people and treats them as “my children”, this makes the audience like him, he is a fair man even with the weight of his fate on his shoulders.
The major flaw (harmatia) of Oedipus is pride. Even though he is a good man with morals, his pride blinds him. His pride makes he think that when ran away from Corinth his destiny wouldn’t turn into reality.
He is sure he can control his destiny and all the odds and this is his downfall.
Oedipus is considered a hero because he is weak before the forces of his destiny, he thinks he can control everything and considers himself stronger than the gods that set out his destiny. The irony is that he’s done exactly what the gods needed so the prophecy came to reality.