Finally Some Good News on Immigration
Speaker: The author of "Finally Some Good News on Immigration," is Dana Perino. Perino is passionate about immigration. It's clear she follows this topic closely and knows that things need to change and the political parties need to come together and compromise for a change. This example of immigration clearly getting in the way of something very good has her frustrated, but now hopeful that these adoptions may finally get easier for American parents ready to open up their homes and lives to the desperate children of other countries.
Occasion: Immigration is a topic that is always on the minds of Americans and ranges anywhere from international adoption to United States border control. Perino values family and there is a special opportunity for couples who don't have children, can't have children, or just want to adopt, to bring a child from another country here to America. The love, care and money that it takes to adopt is noteworthy, but the perseverance these days that it takes to finally carry your child onto a plane to America is tiresome and exhausting. Perino hopes for ways to make this an easier process.
Audience: Perino speaks to everyone in this article. Her audience is tired of the good things that happen in politics getting swept under the rug and forgotten by the news media. Perino likes to connect to her audiences emotionally and personally. This topic hits home, because who doesn't believe the selfless act of adopting a child should be an easier process. Most everyone knows what it feels like to love a child. We can imagine the long sleepless nights parents suffer when their child is not with them, possibly being harmed, cold or hungry. Perino speaks to those Americans unwilling to see that two political parties can work together to get positive things done.
Purpose: Perino's purpose is to inform her readers about the two great new Acts and to make the point that things can get done in the White House if the parties would just work together to make it happen. Perino may have been prompted to write this article because she herself knows a couple who have entered the maze of international adoption and have hit road block after road block. The delays in the process makes parents, as Perino puts it, "...get frustrated and give up..." This is a problem in a world with starving children in desperate need of a caring home.
Subject: The International Adoption Harmonization Act of 2010 and the Help Haiti Act of 2010 are the reasons for this article. Perino shared that she had thought about writing about the "amazing American parents that want to adopt children from another country and what our government can do to help." She eagerly shared these two Acts with her audience because they are a positive step forward in a topic that has many people frustrated.
Tone: Perino's tone is hopeful and optimistic, but she also matter-of-fact. She works for Fox News and they advertise "Fair and Balanced News." She has discovered a positive action taken by Congress but knows things rarely go this way. The parties rarely are able to come together for the common good. She is informative, but her words lack confidence that the bipartisan teamwork will continue.
Perino has an opportunity in her career to pick and choose what to write about. Her purpose in choosing topics which have strong human emotional elements is because she wants to connect to the heart of most people. It's sad to hear about the conditions many of these unwanted children face around the world. We can all relate to wanting to save these children in one way or another. Perino is proud of the congressmen and congresswomen who have fought to help American parents bring their children home. It's certainly not right for politicians to get in the way of these adoptions just to create frustration. Perino values information and wants her readers to be informed of positive developments within our political system. Parents awaiting to adopt a child outside of the U.S. should feel encouraged that they are being supported by several representatives, both Democratic and Republican, within congress.
Speaker: The author of "Finally Some Good News on Immigration," is Dana Perino. Perino is passionate about immigration. It's clear she follows this topic closely and knows that things need to change and the political parties need to come together and compromise for a change. This example of immigration clearly getting in the way of something very good has her frustrated, but now hopeful that these adoptions may finally get easier for American parents ready to open up their homes and lives to the desperate children of other countries.
Occasion: Immigration is a topic that is always on the minds of Americans and ranges anywhere from international adoption to United States border control. Perino values family and there is a special opportunity for couples who don't have children, can't have children, or just want to adopt, to bring a child from another country here to America. The love, care and money that it takes to adopt is noteworthy, but the perseverance these days that it takes to finally carry your child onto a plane to America is tiresome and exhausting. Perino hopes for ways to make this an easier process.
Audience: Perino speaks to everyone in this article. Her audience is tired of the good things that happen in politics getting swept under the rug and forgotten by the news media. Perino likes to connect to her audiences emotionally and personally. This topic hits home, because who doesn't believe the selfless act of adopting a child should be an easier process. Most everyone knows what it feels like to love a child. We can imagine the long sleepless nights parents suffer when their child is not with them, possibly being harmed, cold or hungry. Perino speaks to those Americans unwilling to see that two political parties can work together to get positive things done.
Purpose: Perino's purpose is to inform her readers about the two great new Acts and to make the point that things can get done in the White House if the parties would just work together to make it happen. Perino may have been prompted to write this article because she herself knows a couple who have entered the maze of international adoption and have hit road block after road block. The delays in the process makes parents, as Perino puts it, "...get frustrated and give up..." This is a problem in a world with starving children in desperate need of a caring home.
Subject: The International Adoption Harmonization Act of 2010 and the Help Haiti Act of 2010 are the reasons for this article. Perino shared that she had thought about writing about the "amazing American parents that want to adopt children from another country and what our government can do to help." She eagerly shared these two Acts with her audience because they are a positive step forward in a topic that has many people frustrated.
Tone: Perino's tone is hopeful and optimistic, but she also matter-of-fact. She works for Fox News and they advertise "Fair and Balanced News." She has discovered a positive action taken by Congress but knows things rarely go this way. The parties rarely are able to come together for the common good. She is informative, but her words lack confidence that the bipartisan teamwork will continue.
Perino has an opportunity in her career to pick and choose what to write about. Her purpose in choosing topics which have strong human emotional elements is because she wants to connect to the heart of most people. It's sad to hear about the conditions many of these unwanted children face around the world. We can all relate to wanting to save these children in one way or another. Perino is proud of the congressmen and congresswomen who have fought to help American parents bring their children home. It's certainly not right for politicians to get in the way of these adoptions just to create frustration. Perino values information and wants her readers to be informed of positive developments within our political system. Parents awaiting to adopt a child outside of the U.S. should feel encouraged that they are being supported by several representatives, both Democratic and Republican, within congress.