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"Useless Creatures" by Richard Conniff But usefulness is precisely the argument other people put forward to justify destroying...Asked by FIRST MUSKETEER
"Useless Creatures"
by Richard Conniff
But usefulness is precisely the argument other people put forward to justify destroying or displacing wildlife, and they generally bring a larger and more persuasive kind of green to the argument. Nothing you can say about 100 acres in the New Jersey Meadowlands will ever add up for a politician who thinks a new shopping mall will mean more jobs for local voters (and contributions to his campaign war chest). Nothing you can say about the value of rhinos for ecotourism in South Africa will ever matter to a wildlife trafficker who can sell their horns for $30,000 a pound in Vietnam.
Reprinted by permission of author Richard Conniff
Question
Use the passage to answer the question.
What type of argument does the author use in this speech?
(1 point)
Responses
syntax
syntax
logos
logos
pathos
pathos
ad hominem
by Richard Conniff
But usefulness is precisely the argument other people put forward to justify destroying or displacing wildlife, and they generally bring a larger and more persuasive kind of green to the argument. Nothing you can say about 100 acres in the New Jersey Meadowlands will ever add up for a politician who thinks a new shopping mall will mean more jobs for local voters (and contributions to his campaign war chest). Nothing you can say about the value of rhinos for ecotourism in South Africa will ever matter to a wildlife trafficker who can sell their horns for $30,000 a pound in Vietnam.
Reprinted by permission of author Richard Conniff
Question
Use the passage to answer the question.
What type of argument does the author use in this speech?
(1 point)
Responses
syntax
syntax
logos
logos
pathos
pathos
ad hominem
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The author uses **logos** in this speech. They present logical reasoning about the value of wildlife and the consequences of destroying it, contrasting the economic arguments for development with the ecological and ethical considerations of wildlife conservation.
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