The audience was Congress and citizens of the United States. The purpose was to convince them to enter the war and fight against Germany and its allies.
I'm in class with that question now and it just told me ^ This is correct u welcome all yall answering with each other wrong. I be failing some of my test with this site to and sometimes i make a 100 if i look at more websites to makke sure it's the right answer... Don't always go with what one person say i promise see other websites to see if u see anything similar to what they answering it helps
Answer: because it allows a student to explore different points of view and come up with an angle
Explanation:
Cross referencing is when several books, articles or journals are checked and referenced so that one can have different opinions and explanations with regards to a particular topic.
Therefore, based on the explanation, cross-referencing a topic is important for research purposes so that the researcher can have several opinions and then choose the best one or most ideal.
<span>Hmm I would analyze this as a power struggle and the dynamics of the individual. As you can see, Marcus is arguing for his own freedom and states about "we used to be a free country" and also hints at the lack of privacy. You can feel the tension and the anger flaring in him from the diction that he uses to describe this, here his power and his rights is being "destroyed" because of not only the propaganda- but the symbolic figure of Mr. Benson- forcing him to apologize. Here the power struggle of the individual versus the conformity of a society without freedom of choice is so disliked and unwanted by Marcus he states that "He'd rather get kicked out than apologize."
In other words if you want it short.
1. He's fighting against a government that limits the freedom of people and how they act.
2. Symbolically he is fighting against society by being the individual.
3. He is having problems with Mr. Benson and is not happy by how his used to be free country is now almost a dystopian land and that, there are no individual rights.</span><span />