Answer:
Two things scarlet ibis wants: 1) To live and 2) That Brother will never leave him and/or that he will never be alone.
This argument observes the presence of loaded language, especially in the words that carry negative connotations ("... useless ... trample..."). These are used to appeal to the listener's emotions and sway their opinion on the matter at hand. Options A and B are not viable as answers for this argument due to the fact that the cause and effect presented by the fragment are relatively true. This statement would not count as a "straw man" either as, in order to be one, it would have to be a counterargument attempting to fool/manipulate their opponent.
C. a play in which actors read from a script
CJDJFKCIFKDKCKCKCKCKCKCKCKDKAKSKDKFKFKDKDJDJDJDJDJFJF
Answer:
The destructiveness of war is the major theme of Slaughterhouse-Five. The protagonist, Billy Pilgrim and other characters like Paul Lazzaro, Bernard O' Harry and including the writer suffer from physical as well as psychological devastation caused by the war. Slaughterhouse-Five makes numerous cultural, historical, geographical, and philosophical allusions. It tells of the bombing of Dresden in World War II. It refers to the Battle of the Bulge, the Vietnam War, and the civil rights protests in American cities during the 1960s.
Explanation: