Rhetorical Analysis Of Ben Shapiro's 'Brave'

Words: 1538
Pages: 7

Jack Taylor
Essay 3, Argument Critique
10/14/17

Brave Ben Shapiro made a short speech at the Young Women’s Leadership Summit; he addressed a common problem that he thought that everybody can do: men and women alike, to be brave out in the political world. Shapiro broke his speech into five parts; to be more specific, he briefly defined how you have to be brave enough to understand that your life is in your own hands, brave enough to tell the truth, brave enough to not care what other people think, brave enough to re-examine our own ideas, and his final point is “we have to be brave enough to teach and not just preach.” Almost a thousand woman traveled from across the country to attend the event to be inspired and listen to conservative speakers, activism training, and to network with organizations such as the National Rifle Association, Leadership Institute, and Future Female Leaders. Although Shapiro addresses the issues of the Left’s ideological strangleholds, he fails in executing his beliefs in those controversial topics; on the internet, he is known for destroying other people’s feelings. I agree with Ben Shapiro’s entire speech and it reinforces his
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Ben Shapiro is editor-in-chief of The Daily Wire and host of "The Ben Shapiro Show," the top conservative podcast in the nation. He is the author of seven nonfiction books and is well known for his New York Times bestseller Bullies: How the Left’s Culture of Fear and Intimidation Silences America. Shapiro earned a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from UCLA and graduated from Harvard Law School in 2007. He is a well-informed, young man and most of the time he knows what he is talking about; when he is not educated on the current situation, he will publicly state that he doesn’t know much about it and asks to come back to that conversation after he takes the time to learn the