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... Likewise, there are those who oppose school vouchers, because it will mean that less money will be allocated to the schools that desperately need it and in the long run cause dire consequences to a larger percentage of students approximately 63,800. ... Dewayne Wickem, USA Today and William Raspberry, The Journal Times, use metaphors that proponents view vouchers as a cure for an ailing school system or that “Vouchers have become the Moses’ rod of politics capable of dividing the electorate as efficiently as Moses parted the Red Sea”. Both writers agree that school vouchers are not the answer to the problem, however, they both part ways when it comes to the issue as to how it should be handled.
One side argues that vouchers would hurt the schools most children attend and the supporters of vouchers want to provide an escape hatch from under performing schools. ... Raspberry, writer for The Journal Times depicts the proponents for school vouchers as using dirty trick, and on the other hand, he questions whether they used extremely clever politics to gain the majority vote to launch a five-year voucher plan. ... Raspberry’s use of language creates anger and suspicion of the politician’s motives by using words such as five-year experiment plan, members would never have tried to force vouchers on their home states, voteless District of Columbia.
Approximate Word count = 1019 Approximate Pages = 4.1 (250 words per page double spaced)
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