English, asked by afghany63720033, 12 hours ago

PLEASE HELP ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS!!

1.What bias can you identify in this sentences "One objection is that Pennsylvania’s idea will disproportionately affect the poor. The rich, it is argued, will not be moved by a $300 reward; it will be the poor who will succumb to the incentive and provide organs. So what? Where is the harm? What is wrong with rewarding people, poor or not, for a dead relative’s organ? True, auctioning off organs in the market so that the poor could not afford to get them would be offensive. But this program does not restrict supply to the rich. It seeks to increase supply for all.." *

2.What logical fallacies can you identify in this sentences "we have a free society, but freedom stops at the point where you violate the very integrity of the self. We cannot allow live kidney to be sold at market. it would produce a society in which the lower orders are literary cut up to serve as spare parts for the upper. No decent society can permit that." *

3What logical fallacies can you identify in this sentences "Because there are 62,000 people desperately clinging to life, some of whom will die if we don’t have the courage to move the moral line –and hold it.." *

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Answered by Tehniyatyouknow456
0

Answer:

1:i d k sorry

2:Ever since organ donation became clinically feasible, there have not been enough organs to go around. Figure 1 shows the rate of change from a base value in 1995 through 2008, of three variables: (1) the number of deceased donors, (2) the number of patients with end-stage organ failure who are waiting for an organ, and (3) the number of waiting list patients who either die before an organ becomes available (ie, death on the waiting list or after removal from the waiting list as “too sick to transplant”) [1]. The number of potential recipients on transplant waiting lists has more than doubled, and now stands at over 100,000, whereas the number of deceased donors has increased by only half. Meanwhile, the numbers of deaths related to the organ shortage, which is now greater than 9,000 a year, has grown in parallel with the waiting list. Thus, the gap between supply and demand has grown every year for the past 15 years.

3:i d k again sorry

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