Two thirds of China’s cities don’t meet the country’s own air emissions standards and it continues to increase by what is written in The Dragon Morphs. The Dragon Morphs, Source A (Seligsohn, Deborah,Deborah Seligsohn is a researcher at the University of California, San Diego, and former Science Counselor at the US embassy in Beijing. the Dragon Morphs ,United States, and China are the biggest emission countries , they are trying to cut down the pollution. A woman researching in China, yet to realize the environmental problems that had struck the country. Seligsohn writes how the country attempts to lower the emission levels to put forth a better place and how the government officials planto meet their goals for China. …show more content…
The environmental struggles of coal being in civilians hair causes a lot of emotion and compassion. “Beijing was horribly polluted, especially in winter. Buses belched black smoke. When I rode my bike through city streets I 'd often find chunks of coal in my hair, coughed up by the boilers of the surrounding houses.”(para 2). The author explains how the conditions were so bad there was coal getting in their hair from …show more content…
Biello, David (2014) author of Solar Wars demonstrates a weak ethos compared to Seligsoh’s. Electric companies try to get people to pay additional fees is much of a to make them switched compared to the UN or government officials. “To make up the shortfall, APS proposed a surcharge of up to $100 per month for each solar homeowner. And to convince the public why the charge was necessary, APS, backed by utility interest groups, went on an advertising spree”(Para 2). Adding a fee to electric the homeowners do not use.
Biello, David (2014) author of Solar Wars demonstrates a superior logos statement compared to Seligsoh’s. Biello captures how it’s better to switch to solar panels compared to using original electric. “More than 127,000 homes in Arizona now have rooftop arrays. The Coxes bought their panels outright, after doing the math that proved that the system -- with a life of 20 years or more -- would pay for the $12,000 cost in roughly six years, through savings on their electricity bill and tax breaks.”(Para 1). Discussing the saving that would unfold from using solar