This argument illustrates the slippery slope fallacy as Leo Panchello was used to create a happy picture of how much hard work local business owners put in and then goes on to tell how the light rail would destroy the local business and ruin all of their hard work which brings a sad ending.
<h3>What is a fallacy?</h3>
This is known as a mistaken belief, a faulty or failed reasoning especially one based on unsound argument.
Hence, the fallacy makes the argument weak because there's no indication that a light rail would destroy a main local business in the town as when constructing a light rail, they do not tear up the street, instead, they make the light rail a part of the street
A slippery slope fallacy is a course of action that is rejected because there is little or no evidence that one insists to lead to a chain reaction resulting in an undesirable end.
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The answer is the first option: We live on the same street.
The nominative case takes subject pronouns only, since the pronouns are the subjects of the sentences. They are: I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they.
Options b, c and d have object pronouns - them, me and him - acting as subject pronouns and, consequently, as subjects to the verbs, making the sentences grammatically wrong.
Answer:
A. to get
Explanation:
To get fills in the blank you've provided
Answer:
Society is a group of people living as a community or an organised group of a people for common purpose
Answer:
The meeting in the place with no darkness between Winston and O'Brien was perceived as a place that Winston feels instantly that he recognizes this place.
Explanation:
The expression "the place with no darkness" is introduced actually into this excellent novel in Chapter 2 at the introduction, when Winston dreams of O'Brien, and is repeated at various other phases throughout the novel.
The impression of this phrase and dream is an indication that the future Winston Smith sees and how vital the part O'Brien will play in that future, even though it is in different way radically, from what Winston thought
Winston finally gets to the Ministry of Love, and meets O'Brien there in a place with no darkness, he immediately feels that he knows this place before now.
This is one of many ways that Orwell foreshadows the future in this novel and points towards its rather unrelenting close and grim.