Hi. You have not shown the speech your question is referring to. But when searching for your question on the internet, I was able to find another question like yours that showed the speech "The Perils of Indifference." In that case, I hope the answer below can help you.
Answer:
His personal view increases his credibility as a primary source.
Explanation:
"The Perils of Indifference" begins with a third-person point of view, where Wiesel tells the story of a Jewish boy who was freed from a Nazi concentration camp by American troops. Wiesel then switches the point of view to the first-person point of view, where he reveals that the boy was him and starts talking about how he feels when he remembers the day he was released and what he went through as a prisoner in the camp concentration. The shift to the first-person point of view, gives credibility to Wiesel's speech, as it shows that his narrative is a primary source, that is, it is the report of someone who lived the moment he is presenting and is reporting that moment first hand, without adaptations and without the need for third parties.
Answer:
You need to make a petition and have a certain amount of people to sign it, (let´s say you need/want 25,000 people to sign it to stop animal abuse, and have no more kill shelters, and stop lab testing on domestic animals.) i know that it´s very specific. Then you can go to the city´s courthouse, give them the official petition document, and ask the judge to give this to whoever is in charge of the city/state. Then you need to keep calling and write a letter to the white house/whoever is in charge to ask them to make a change in what you want them to change, i´m not a good person at explaining things, but i am speaking from my experience.