Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Hypothetical Speech to Senate on Terrorism. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In response to another hypothetical attack on U.S. soil resulting in the hypothetical desire to inter based on ethnicity, Senator X addresses the issues raised by esteemed colleagues, Senators Bombast, Egoist, Utilitarian and Ontologist, some with split decision within the separate categories. Senator X argues against based on deconstructing boundaries as the proper response in a democracy. Bibliography lists 2 sources. jvTerror.rtf
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_jvTerror.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
given us a sense of urgency concerning the terror "on our shores" and the need to secure our nation against further attack. However, encampment is a drastic measure. We are
talking "war," and we must keep our heads in making the decision to undermine all we have done in the name of democracy, which is the liberation of all people
from the very camps you suggest. As you would say, we must not destroy the very foundation of our nation. Let us
review the facts as our esteemed colleagues have laid them out. Ethel Egoist and Edgar Egoist have given us heartbreaking statistics. Six thousand dead, thousands more injured, and perhaps hundreds
of thousands more potentially claimed in the next weeks to new terror as yet unidentified. The Honorable Ethel Egoist has described our suffering as "a wreckage of human flesh caving
in upon itself into infinity" if we fail to act as she prescribes. She asks that we not forget those beautiful, innocent children taken from our history forever by this
latest terrorist act, and asks us as lawmakers to protect the innocents from additional devastation by sending men, women, and children to the camps. Forgive me, but this is nothing
more than an argument for retaliation. Even her colleague, the Honorable Edgar Egoist senses interment is not the proper democratic response. Edgar
understands that alienation will follow, that the very act of repeating what occurred "within the borders of a nation with its arms open to the world" in the Japanese interment
camps during World War II will not be met with such polite control as our Japanese citizens afforded us then. He reminds us that we will be met this time
...