Song Mash-Up
Created by: Camille, Morgann, and Sona
(*insert cool beat-boxing noises whenever you want*)
Buddy, you're a man making big mistakes
Not playing by the rules, God will not help you
You got sins on your face, you big disgrace
Slipping on the path of destruction all over the place
Singing
We will, we will be punished (2x)
Buddy you're a young man, holy man
Shouting in the street going to take on the world someday
You got gospel in your heart, you big follower
Running from the serpent all over the place
We will, we will be punished
(SIng it now!)
We will, we will be punished
Now, buddy you're a changed man, bad man
Pleading with your eyes, the boot's coming down
You got sins on your face you big disgrace
God better put you back into your place
We will, we will be punished (2x)
(Everybody!)
We will, we will be punished (2x)
Awww man! Ayeee man! Amen!
Created by: Camille, Morgann, and Sona
(*insert cool beat-boxing noises whenever you want*)
Buddy, you're a man making big mistakes
Not playing by the rules, God will not help you
You got sins on your face, you big disgrace
Slipping on the path of destruction all over the place
Singing
We will, we will be punished (2x)
Buddy you're a young man, holy man
Shouting in the street going to take on the world someday
You got gospel in your heart, you big follower
Running from the serpent all over the place
We will, we will be punished
(SIng it now!)
We will, we will be punished
Now, buddy you're a changed man, bad man
Pleading with your eyes, the boot's coming down
You got sins on your face you big disgrace
God better put you back into your place
We will, we will be punished (2x)
(Everybody!)
We will, we will be punished (2x)
Awww man! Ayeee man! Amen!
Grapes of Wrath Project Link
Click here!
Click here!
Fallacies ~ Camille, Stacy, and Rosalie
18) Biased Sample: If a sample selected is not representative of the population that is surveyed or if survey questions are worded in certain ways that are meant to lead the people surveyed to answer in a certain way
Example #1- The neighborhood council wants to vote on whether to change their laws about keeping dogs on leashes. They only survey one street, where 75% wanted the dogs to be leashed. Then then go on to say that 75% of the entire neighborhood wants dogs to be leashed.
Example #2- (Real World Example) I read an article on how telephone survey's are a biased sample. Telephone surveys that use landlines miss out on about 25% of the population because some people only have cell phones. They survey cannot be an accurate representation if this group is missed.
38) Slippery Slope: "This event occurs, therefore this event will have to follow." This fallacy claims that some event must inevitably follow another event without an argument of logic.
Example #1- I read an article talking about slippery slope logic applied to women. An opponent of women suffrage once predicted that allowing women the right to vote would create a race of masculine women and would make the men feminine. They also said that it would cause the women to rule over the government. This obviously did not happen. Although women do not rule the government, we do now have more gender equality than we did a century ago. Just because we let women vote, doesn't mean they will control the government.
20) Circumstantial Ad Hominem: Attacking a claim based on personal interest and only that; includes religion, political views, ethnic background. Person A makes a claim and then person B makes the claim false because person A's person beliefs / interest relate to their claim.
Real World Example - Ferguson:
(statiscally 67% of Ferguson's population is African-American and Micheal Brown was African-American)
1) A white man asks a African-American man about the Micheal Brown/Darren Wilson situation in Ferguson.
2) The African-American man disagrees about Darren Wilson's decisions and Micheal Brown should have not been shot.
3) The white man says, "You're only saying that because you're black."
18) Burden of Proof
Definition- putting the proof on the opposite side to make your side look more valid.
Example-
Bigfoot doesn't exist because there is no proof that he exists.
There's no proof that Bigfoot doesn't exist, so he exists.
Real World Example-
The government is using Ebola to depopulate the earth.
There's no proof that they are.
There's no proof that they aren't so it is true.
18) Biased Sample: If a sample selected is not representative of the population that is surveyed or if survey questions are worded in certain ways that are meant to lead the people surveyed to answer in a certain way
Example #1- The neighborhood council wants to vote on whether to change their laws about keeping dogs on leashes. They only survey one street, where 75% wanted the dogs to be leashed. Then then go on to say that 75% of the entire neighborhood wants dogs to be leashed.
Example #2- (Real World Example) I read an article on how telephone survey's are a biased sample. Telephone surveys that use landlines miss out on about 25% of the population because some people only have cell phones. They survey cannot be an accurate representation if this group is missed.
38) Slippery Slope: "This event occurs, therefore this event will have to follow." This fallacy claims that some event must inevitably follow another event without an argument of logic.
Example #1- I read an article talking about slippery slope logic applied to women. An opponent of women suffrage once predicted that allowing women the right to vote would create a race of masculine women and would make the men feminine. They also said that it would cause the women to rule over the government. This obviously did not happen. Although women do not rule the government, we do now have more gender equality than we did a century ago. Just because we let women vote, doesn't mean they will control the government.
20) Circumstantial Ad Hominem: Attacking a claim based on personal interest and only that; includes religion, political views, ethnic background. Person A makes a claim and then person B makes the claim false because person A's person beliefs / interest relate to their claim.
Real World Example - Ferguson:
(statiscally 67% of Ferguson's population is African-American and Micheal Brown was African-American)
1) A white man asks a African-American man about the Micheal Brown/Darren Wilson situation in Ferguson.
2) The African-American man disagrees about Darren Wilson's decisions and Micheal Brown should have not been shot.
3) The white man says, "You're only saying that because you're black."
18) Burden of Proof
Definition- putting the proof on the opposite side to make your side look more valid.
Example-
Bigfoot doesn't exist because there is no proof that he exists.
There's no proof that Bigfoot doesn't exist, so he exists.
Real World Example-
The government is using Ebola to depopulate the earth.
There's no proof that they are.
There's no proof that they aren't so it is true.