Rhetorical Analysis: Call To Remove Homeless People

Words: 984
Pages: 4

Yadira Guzman
Rhetorical Analysis Call to Remove Homeless People (All 8) Before Royal Wedding Stirs Anger written by Ceylan Yeginsu. The royal wedding has changed the perspectives of many people in Windsor and the United Kingdom for those who have read the article. Homelessness has been capturing the attention of the residents of Windsor and the citizens of the United Kingdom. Yeginsu a journalist who studied at Columbia University to receive her masters in journalism is a New York Times reporter based in London. She is covering the situation between an ethical issue that arises with the problem that is or isn’t homelessness in Windsor. Yeginsu uses strong evidence such as testimonials to entice the audience by appealing to logos and pathos,
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Dudley tweeted about an “epidemic of rough sleeping and vagrancy in Windsor,” which he says paints the historical market town in an “unfavorable light.” Through this statement, the notion is made that while Mr.Dudley can afford to go on a ski vacation, his people are suffering in the cold. Here logos is seen through an economical lense while there are homeless citizens in the cold winter streets not by choice, and seeing that their leader is off on a ski vacation not taking importance to the issue at hand. The use of diction in the statement makes Mr. Dudley seem ruthless towards the homeless citizens. With referencing the title of the text there are only eight people in total that are homeless, according to the officials. They make it seem as a small issue when in reality according to Yeginsu “one in every two-hundred people in England are homeless.” Here the people are given false information which Yeginsu points out. There are many people homeless although she does not specify the population of Windsor, where this debate arose from. Again associating this statement closely to the Dudley claim one can see the indifference made or had when it comes to the homeless people of Windsor by their own government. Yeginsu references the government many times throughout the article when in relation to the issue, with the government to be at the center of it