In the article “Guns in Your Face”, the author practices all of these appeals with extreme skill and craftsmanship. Character appeal, being the least used of the three in this article, pulls in the reader by giving credible sources and reliable information when it comes to specific people. Collins does this by mentioning Gov. Perdue and explaining how the public bent and twisted his words in a speech about open carry. This happened because Gov. Perdue is a credible source. The next appeal would be the emotional appeal. One of the most recognizable emotional appeals within this article is when Collins mentions children being in danger. Because a lot of adults have children, it causes them to relate to this and think about the situation as if it was their child. Now that it relates to the reader, it causes them to become emotionally appealed to the article. The last and most used appeal would be the logical appeal. Throughout the article many real-life examples are brought to light showing the lasting effects of open carry within some of the States throughout America. One of these examples include the Jim Cooley story. Cooley walked into an airport with an assault rifle just to practice his right and when asked to stop, he refused and answered with “If you’re detaining me then I’m going to have to file a lawsuit.” Although this ended up in a triumph for Cooley as the police could not stop him, it had left a chilling fear hovering over the rest of America. These are facts stated by Collins and they bring in a logical appeal by causing the reader to use statistics of actual events to make a decision of whether or not they support the
In the article “Guns in Your Face”, the author practices all of these appeals with extreme skill and craftsmanship. Character appeal, being the least used of the three in this article, pulls in the reader by giving credible sources and reliable information when it comes to specific people. Collins does this by mentioning Gov. Perdue and explaining how the public bent and twisted his words in a speech about open carry. This happened because Gov. Perdue is a credible source. The next appeal would be the emotional appeal. One of the most recognizable emotional appeals within this article is when Collins mentions children being in danger. Because a lot of adults have children, it causes them to relate to this and think about the situation as if it was their child. Now that it relates to the reader, it causes them to become emotionally appealed to the article. The last and most used appeal would be the logical appeal. Throughout the article many real-life examples are brought to light showing the lasting effects of open carry within some of the States throughout America. One of these examples include the Jim Cooley story. Cooley walked into an airport with an assault rifle just to practice his right and when asked to stop, he refused and answered with “If you’re detaining me then I’m going to have to file a lawsuit.” Although this ended up in a triumph for Cooley as the police could not stop him, it had left a chilling fear hovering over the rest of America. These are facts stated by Collins and they bring in a logical appeal by causing the reader to use statistics of actual events to make a decision of whether or not they support the