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TOPIC: ARGUMENT177 - The following is a letter that recently appeared in the Oak City Gazette, a local newspaper.
"Membership in Oak City's Civic Club-a club whose primary objective is to discuss local issues-should continue to be restricted to people who live in Oak City. People who work in Oak City but who live elsewhere cannot truly understand the business and politics of the city. It is important to restrict membership to city residents because only residents pay city taxes and therefore only residents understand how the money could best be used to improve the city. At any rate, restricting membership in this way is unlikely to disappoint many of the nonresidents employed in Oak City, since neighboring Elm City's Civic Club has always had an open membership policy, and only twenty-five nonresidents have joined Elm City's Club in the last ten years."
WORDS: 463 TIME: 0:45:00 DATE: 2007-3-19
In order to conclude that membership in Oak City's Civic Club should continue to be restricted to people who live in Oak City, the arguer poses some evidence, including some logical analyses, an analogy to the Elm City's Civic Club. However, I should indicate that these evidence are not strong enough to support the conclusion.
First of all, it is quite unpersuasive to say that people who work in Oak City but who live elsewhere cannot truly understand the business and politics of the city. It is the mind and intelligence, rather than the living location, that will determine one's comprehension of the business and politics of the city. Some nonresident white-collars, who are among the upper-class of the city, might understand the city deeply, and some nonresident professionals, who are teaching in local universities, might have some direct some studies about the business and politics of the city and therefore enjoy more knowledge about it.
Another explanation that only residents pay city taxes and therefore only residents understand how the money could best be used to improve the city, posed by the arguer in order to prove the importance of restrict membership, is unconvincing. It is true that the residents pay city taxes, but what about other taxes? As we all know, everyone that hold a car should pay the car tax no matter whether he/she is a resident, and everyone that get salaries from a corporation, should pay the property tax no matter if he/she lives in the city. These individuals all have responsibility to discuss the local issue that about their tax or other things that have relationship with them. Moreover, do the residents understand how the money could best be used?
Maybe some nonresidents mentioned in the second paragraph, who have great ability, will know how to utilize money to improve the city.
The analogy to Elm City's Civic Club may be another fallacy for the reason that the conditions of the two cities might be quite different. For instance, the proportion and aggregate population of nonresidents in the two cities may differ considerably. It is likely that there is only few nonresident in Elm City so that the 25 of them, who have joined its Civic Club, although seems to be quite few, may actually occupy a big proportion, while Oak city might be a truly immigration city where the nonresidents take 50% or even more of its population, so that if none of them have been included into the Civic Club, they will disappoint. Furthermore, it is also probable that the nonresident in Elm City are not so willing to discuss the city's issue, while the nonresident in Oak City, on the contrary, behave active. Hence, we could not judge whether the nonresident of Oak city will disappoint on the analogy of Elm City.
To sum up, the arguer does not adequately demonstrate the necessity of the membership restriction for the reason aforementioned, so we can hardly accept his conclusion.
第一次限时做,限了45分钟。。。以前写一篇A都是近一个半小时的哈。。。 |
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