Answer:
Headmaster: I have decided to install cameras in every room in the school.
You: I strongly disagree due to the fact that that would be depriving the students of their privacy and over all feeling of safety which schools are supposed to provide.
Headmaster: we feel that the cameras will provide safety for the students by monitoring them.
You: But at the expense of their privacy.You:Having privacy s part of safety and when you add cameras you diminish that whole aspect of safety.
Headmaster: Well having the cameras we can view student activities which can negatively effect the safety environment of the school. For say if there was a school shooter we would be able to see him/her right away.
You: Seeing him/her is not enough. A better idea would be putting police men at the enterance of the school and in other various spaces within the school to ensure the safety of the students and catch the shooter right away
Headmaster: The cameras are more cost efficient.
You: If it is about cost then the school can make a fund raiser to support hiring the policemen.
Headmaster:If the students are willing to contribute then I say why not.
You: Thank you headmaster you wont be dissappionted!
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Explanation:
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Explanation:
The Declaration of Independence is perhaps the most masterfully written state paper of Western civilization. As Moses Coit Tyler noted almost a century ago, no assessment of it can be complete without taking into account its extraordinary merits as a work of political prose style. Although many scholars have recognized those merits, there are surprisingly few sustained studies of the stylistic artistry of the Declaration.1 This essay seeks to illuminate that artistry by probing the discourse microscopically--at the level of the sentence, phrase, word, and syllable. By approaching the Declaration in this way, we can shed light both on its literary qualities and on its rhetorical power as a work designed to convince a "candid world" that the American colonies were justified in seeking to establish themselves as an independent nation.2
The text of the Declaration can be divided into five sections--the introduction, the preamble, the indictment of George III, the denunciation of the British people, and the conclusion. Because space does not permit us to explicate each section in full detail, we shall select features from each that illustrate the stylistic artistry of the Declaration as a whole.3
The introduction consists of the first paragraph--a single, lengthy, periodic sentence:
When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.4