What are the strengths of using statistics as evidence?
Using statistics helps you prove your point, and it backs up what you’re saying. It also gives your audience reliable information which could persuade them to listen to what you’re saying.
What are the limitations?
Limitations include using statistics that aren’t proven or seem exaggerated. For example saying something like 80% of Fijians migrate to New Zealand for the scenery, it’s not proven because it’s a personal experience.
Before nationalism literature wasn’t serious, newspapers would write more about local events and others. Such as, things that would occur in the community or maybe even local heroism. After the war, newspapers had dramatic headlines and most things were false.
Patriotism means love and devotion for one’s country, yet knowing your boundaries. For example, supporting your country but not if they’re in the wrong.
Nationalism
Nationalism also means love and devotion for one’s country but having no boundaries. For example, supporting your country even if their perspective is wrong.
Sensationalism
Sensationalism means writing fake headlines or fake stories and publishing them to be true. It’s used to excite an audience.
Propaganda
Germany’s ‘final solution’
The final solution refers to the genocide of Jewish during World War 2. It put an end to policies aimed at encouraging or forcing Jews to leave the German Reich.
Eugenics/Racial Hygiene
Eugenics or racial hygiene (Rassenhygiene) was a scientific movement of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Gender
Gender refers to characteristics of women, men, girls and boys that are socially constructed.
Social Construct
A social construct is something that does not really exist in objective reality, but it exist because humans agree that it exists.
Systemic Racism
Systemic racism is a form of racism that is implanted through laws and regulations within society or an organisation.
Unconscious Bias
Unconscious bias refers to a bias that we are unaware of. It happens when our brains make quick judgments of people and situations without us realising.