PLEASE HELP WILL MARK BRAINLIEST**** (45 POINTS)Read this excerpt from a 1906 speech by President Theodore Roosevelt on the cond
itions in stockyards and meatpacking plants. I transmit herewith the report of Mr. James Bronson Reynolds and Commissioner Charles P. Neill, the special committee whom I appointed to investigate into the conditions in the stock yards of Chicago and report thereon to me. This report is of a preliminary nature. I submit it to you now because it shows the urgent need of immediate action by the Congress in the direction of providing a drastic and thoroughgoing inspection by the Federal government of all stockyards and packing houses and of their products, so far as the latter enter into interstate or foreign commerce. The conditions shown by even this short inspection to exist in the Chicago stock yards are revolting. It is imperatively necessary in the interest of health and of decency that they should be radically changed. Under the existing law it is wholly impossible to secure satisfactory results.
When my attention was first directed to this matter an investigation was made under the Bureau of Animal Industry of the Department of Agriculture. When the preliminary statements of this investigation were brought to my attention, they showed such defects in the law and such wholly unexpected conditions that I deemed it best to have a further immediate investigation by men not connected with the bureau, and accordingly appointed Messrs. Reynolds and Neill. It was impossible under existing law that satisfactory work should be done by the Bureau of Animal Industry. I am now, however, examining the way in which the work actually was done.
Which phrases does Roosevelt use to appeal to the audience’s emotions?
“special committee” and “Bureau of Animal Industry of the Department of Agriculture”
“conditions . . . are revolting” and “in the interest of health and of decency”
“Under the existing law” and “preliminary statements of this investigation”
“I deemed it best” and “I am now . . . examining the way in which the work actually was done”
conditions shown by even this short inspection to exist in the Chicago stock yards are revolting and in the interest of health and of this investigation