<span>Personally, I would choose this topic: Speech related to violence: You might want to write about limitations on freedom of speech related to violence. Speech that incites violence is not covered by the First Amendment and can result in prosecution in the United States. However, speech that merely supports violence as a political option is not considered a crime.
Part A: As this topic is something that is more of a national issue than one within one single school, I would address the letter to a member of congress. Addressing it to anyone else would do little to actually address the issue.
Part B:
Stance: While freedom of speech allows one to express their opinions publicly, those who engage in speech promoting violence, or hate speech, negatively impact society as a whole as well as on an individual level. As such, speech promoting violence should not be considered under the First Amendment, and those individuals who choose to engage in it should be persecuted.
Evidence: Recent KKK & Antifa conflict in Charlottesville, </span>
B: negotiations for inspection and control of weapons
Explanation:
President John Fitzgerald Kennedy from the quote above is talking about negotiations to inspect and control weapons that's why he called for formulation of serious and workable plans and proposals among countries to control and inspect weapons of destruction.
In May 1944, the Nazis deported 15-year-old Wiesel and his family to Auschwitz, a concentration camp in Poland. Wiesel's mother and the youngest of his three sisters died at Auschwitz, while he and his father later were moved to another camp, Buchenwald, located in Germany.
Wiglaf is Swedish, but when he said, "I started to help my relatives," he thought of himself as a relative of Beowulf. Wiglaf came to Beowulf to help with the fight against the Dragon. This represents some important heroic virtue in Wiglaf.