It's for English in which we pick a topic and then argue our side for it, immediately I knew what I needed to do. I picked my topic as 'Should We Trust Government' and of course I'm arguing no for obvious reasons, and I have to use numerous types of media to get our point across (I had to make a meme pertaining to it, which I thought was pretty funny. I also have to create my own ad, make a song, and make a journal entry.) I'll link the meme I made in the comments, but I just wanted to get some ideas on what my ad should look like. I was thinking of a Big Brother-esque poster with surveillance cams pointing at the audience with the words, "You Shall Obey." Any Suggestions or thoughts?
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SarMegahhikkitha ago
You trust the government enough to raise red flags on an assignment specifically designed to flush out who's a dissenter, doesn't that invalidate your argument? Besides cringey memes making fun of how Native Americans speak English, I'm not sure what your argument is. If an authority can be trusted, it makes sense to obey them. The question is specifically whether the authority is more likely to be benevolent or malevolent. For example, Bill Gates sits in at all these Bilberberg meetings, so he's either a good guy and everyone's good, or a bad guy and everyone's bad, since being a good guy and allowed to know the secret plans of the evil elites would be ridiculous--a house divided against itself cannot stand. Now if you say he's evil, you have to say why, explore the NWO agenda (Georgia Guidestones?) and figure out why he's spending so much to educate (indoctrinate?) Africans; are all his philanthropic efforts just a misdirection? This is a whole rabbit hole people spend often their entire lives down, and 5 minutes spent on hand-waving and memes just confirms every negative stereotype about millenials.