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zheka24 [161]
3 years ago
6

I need a speech for student council, im running for president. Help?

English
2 answers:
castortr0y [4]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

I have ran and failed before. I learned my mistakes the next year and became VP. You really need to show what you can do to change what is bad. Students want to elect someone they like and know is competent. Be a leader in the classroom. Participate in class discussions and get good grades, it’s how you’ll prove your competence. Don’t be the class clown or the student who’s always on their cell phone or asleep. Make posters. The posters can be super simple; even just a print out of the slogan on normal computer paper will work. However, you should have a lot of them. The exact number will vary proportionally to the number of students in your class (or school, if you’re running for the overall Student Government President). What I mean by that is if your class has 100 students, 10 posters may be enough, but if you have 1000 students in your class, you may want to put up 50 or more posters. Count on some posters being ripped down or disappearing. Most schools have rules against this, but it’s hard to catch someone ripping down a poster. Plan on making extras. Some of these tips helped me in becoming VP so I hope this will help you.

Sloan [31]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

What do we need for our school? My name is ____ and I'm open to many ideas. If you think something is good for our school, I will think about doing it. Technically passing or vetoing laws but more like a school type. Many problems are going to happen probably and we have to fight those problems. Those problems are fire, and fire and fire create a bigger fire. We need to be the water. Whoever is elected will be the water of our school. Remember, water can take any shape. It can be small or big. Size doesn't matter in this competition. Just because someone is a higher grade doesn't mean they should be elected. Brains are the ones that matter. Your vote matters on how your education will be, and education is important. If you vote me, I will create ways people can have fun together and have a fun education. I say you vote me. And that concludes my speech.

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(1) People will often accept what people in authority, even if the data clearly indicates that they're wrong. If an economist from Harvard weighs in on an issue and homeless person weighs in on that same issue, the economist will be believed and the homeless person will be ridiculed, even if the data makes it very clear that the homeless person is right. (This is known as the 'fallacy of authority.' )

(2) People tend judge others by their words, not their deeds, with the result that a grouchy person who does good is seen as evil, whereas an evil person who pays lip-service to virtue is seen as good.

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(5) It is assumed that confirmation is transitive, i.e. that if p confirms q and q confirms r, then p confirms. But this is not so. Smith's being a crime boss is evidence of his having considerable, and Smith's having considerable wealth is evidence of his having some kind of legitimate employment; but Smith's being a crime boss is not evidence of his having legitimate employment.

When people commit fallacies 1-3, their doing so tends to have an emotional basis; they want to believe that authority-figures are good people, that people are honest, and that what is strange is impossible. When people commit fallacies 4 and 5, their doing is less a reflection of emotionally rooted prejudices than of sheer lack of acumen. In any case, all of these fallacies are routinely committed.

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