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0.5704
Chimera Difficulty Score
a synthesis of Flesch-Kincaid, Coleman-Liau, SMOG, and Dale-Chall readability metrics
When the Supreme Court let a president get away with redefining birthright citizenship The president finds the long-settled meaning of the citizenship clause to be an intolerable obstacle to his agenda. The reason? Each year it would make U.S. citizens of tens of thousands of people who do not fit his racial and cultural ideal of what it means to be an “American.” So what does he do? His administr...
Analyzing the article under a skeptical lens reveals patterns of nuanced argumentation and intellectual collaboration. The author employs Steelman by presenting a strong version of the narrative, giving credit to both parties involved in the case. However, potential manipulation may be present through the use of emotional appeals (fear of government overreach) and distortion (framing the issue as a battle between citizenship rights and governmental authority). Root cause analysis suggests that t...