Analysis Of Schizophrenic Killer: My Cousin

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Everyone should be treated equally, should get support and care equally. “Schizophrenic. Killer. My Cousin.” is a true story published on Mother Jones on May-June 2013 issue (non profit organization article) by Mac McClelland. McClelland was formerly Mother Jones’ human rights reporter and writer of “The Rights Stuff”. In it she, talks about her cousin Houston, who had mental illness and at his age of 22 he stabbed his father 60 times with four different knives. Mac McClelland’s aunt Terri also suffered from mental illness at the age of 16. Aunt Terri and Houston were diagnosed with schizophrenia, a brain disorder in which people see reality abnormally. McClelland’s thesis states that well staffed hospital and properly administered antipsychotic medications would have helped Houston like how it did for Terri. The Mother Jones discuss issues about politics to climate to education to food. As the author 's thesis states how better care for Houston would have lead to an happy ending or to a better ending. To provide care, support, and money to mentally ill people. She mentioned how the Government should take care of them. If the Government starts to take some action toward this we can save people like Houston or at least prevent any crime like Houston’s. If the Government starts to take some actions, their will be less “Houston” and more “Terri”. McClelland really made her article strong by using rhetorical strategies ethos, pathos and logos well. She showed her credibility through ethos, emotions through pathos and logic through logos. All these made us the readers, read her story. I believe she used pathos more effectively than any other rhetorical strategies because many of us are persuaded from her story because of her well use of pathos, how she executed her emotion through specific word choices, and

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