The Use of Power Position to Control Others

The Use of Power Position to Control Others


Assume you are the president of a nation. You have been given the podium to speak about the rights and wrongs of gay marriage. Will you go by your opinion and lean towards one position to use that power given to you by the public vote or will you expose both sides of the story? Well in the arguing article speech “Internet Rights and Wrongs: Choices & Challenges in a Networked World” by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, we find a lot of points made in terms of internet freedom by the use of her power position. After she made her speech to the audience in George Washington University there were authors, professors, writers, and research study groups who wrote on behave of the arguments she made. Amongst one of them is Gloria Sabbagh who writes for The Christian Science Monitor newspaper that is an independent international news organization which focus on mainstream media and another is Dan Sabbagh who is one of the authors from The Guardian newspaper which has a long history of editorial and political independence. From the points presented by Goodale, we can see how some of the arguments Clinton makes were a means of “opportunity for the US to deliver a forceful message as the turmoil in Middle East continues to unfold” while view from Sabbagh shows Clinton’s significant argument is mixed with some shadows of deception. As powerful Clinton’s argument speech for internet freedom may seem, we see two sides to the story where a lot of points she makes has good credentials while some others are not clear and maybe biased to have traces of deceit.
In Clinton’s article speech, “Internet Rights and Wrongs: Choices & Challenges in a Networked World”, she starts her argument by bringing the January 28th incident where she states, “the Internet went dark across Egypt” that day to pull her audiences’ full attention. She then adds to her remarks while Egyptians were demanding for new government that the government of Egypt were against their people to have the...

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