Thursday, August 30, 2012

Writting again.

I want to write a book, well anything really; an article, an essay. I am in a writing mood. I loved writing factual essays at school and I want to get back into it. I love the written word, language sentance structure, getting my point across, making my argument, I liked the reading, the reseach. I feel that I need to exercise my brain.
I want to start writing one essay/short story/ article a week.

I need ideas:
Bubbles The lost art of letter writing - Does how you were raised effect what kind of parent you will be?
- Free speech? Freedom of opinion?
- The production and sale of cigarettes should be made illegal.
- Censorship
- Imagine that you have the opportunity to travel back through time. At what point in history would you like to stop and why?

- Select a creative work -- a novel, a film, a poem, a musical piece, a painting or other work of art -- that has influenced the way you view the world and the way you view yourself. Discuss the work and its effect on you.
- Basic human rights/which are the most important.
- The lost art of letter-writing deserves to be revived.
- Butter Isn't Better (Than Margarine)
- Abortion Should be Banned
- If you could spend a year with any real or fictional person in the past, present, or future, whom would you choose? Why?
- If you had the gift of telepathy, the ability to read other people’s minds, would you use this gift or not? Explain.
- Should people with terminal illnesses have the right to doctor assisted suicides?
- Should stem cell researchers be able to use stem cells from aborted babies to cure diseases?
- Explain how your experiences as a teenager significantly differ from those of your friends. Include comparisons.
-  Name one book you have read in the past year, describe your reason for considering this book significant and what you gained from reading it.
 - Pick a story of local, national, or international importance from the front page of any newspaper. Identify your source and give the date the article appeared. Then use your sense of humor, sense of outrage, sense of justice—or just plain good sense—to explain why the story engages your attention.










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