Answer:
Explanation:?????
Given Brainly
write about a time that you had to correct a wrong and what you learned from the experience?
Can someone write me a paragraph on Genocide I'm gonna add it to my essay
I have until 11:59 so take your time :)
Answer:
As the Genocide Convention of 1948 states, “at all periods of history genocide has inflicted great losses on
humanity” (Kaye and Stråth 2000: 24). Nevertheless, the twentieth century was termed the “century of genocide”
because of the high number of cases of genocide during that time period (Bartrop 2002: 522). For the purpose of this
essay, the definition of genocide will be taken from the Genocide Convention, which defines genocide as “intent to
destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group”. The genocide of the Armenians, the
Holocaust and the genocide in Rwanda are the three genocides of the twentieth century that fit that definition
(Destexhe 1994: 4-5). In this essay, the causes of modern genocide will be investigated using these three genocides
as case studies. There are various reasons why genocide may occur and it is often a combination of circumstances
that leads to genocide. The present essay will investigate the underlying conditions that make genocide possible,
while leaving out catalytic events that may trigger genocide. The essay will firstly draw on the works of Horkheimer
and Adorno in examining the relations between Enlightenment ideas and genocide. The correlations between war
and economic crises will be subject to analysis in the second part of the essay. Finally, the creation of out-groups and
in-groups will be explored. While these are certainly not the only causes of genocide, they may be deemed to be preconditions.
Raphael Lemkin coined the term “genocide” in the 1940s with the Holocaust in mind, which for him signified the
return of an enlightened people to barbarism (Freeman 1995: 210). Similarly, Foster (1980: 2) sees the Holocaust as
an aberration of an enlightened and developed nation. However, there are other scholars who argue that genocide is
not an exception of Enlightenment but in fact a result of it. Horkheimer and Adorno (1973: 3-4) argue that the ideals of
Enlightenment, which are human emancipation and rationality, alienate humans from nature and result in men
wanting to control nature and, in turn, other people as well. Bauman (1989: 91), continuing this idea over a decade
later, proposes that since the Enlightenment, the extermination of a people serves to establish a perfect society. The
Enlightenment brought with it the belief in an evolutionary development towards a better society through state
engineering (Bauman 1989: 70; Kaye and Stråth 2000: 11). “Gardening” and “modern medicine” were used as
metaphors for human tasks that would improve a society (Bauman 1989: 70). In the enlightened world, a state can
become a “wonderful utopia” (Hamburg 2008: 44) through “designing, cultivating and weed-poisoning” (Bauman1989: 13). It is a modern idea that everything can be measured and classified, even a “race” and its character
(Bauman 1989: 68). This classification of races, coupled with the modern idea of a constantly improvable society,
leads to Social-Darwinist ideas of the survival of the fittest (Kaye and Stråth 2000: 15).
Armenians (Balakian 2008: 160), Jews (Bauman 1989: 76) and Tutsi (Mullen 2006: 172) were seen as worthless
groups standing between a population and the realisation of such a perfect society. Therefore, in the mind of the
“rational and enlightened” thinker, they were legitimate targets for extermination (Kaye and Stråth 2000: 15). This
“purifying” of the state through genocide is reflected in the language of the genocidaires (Stone 2004: 50).
Armenians were termed “tubercular microbes” and a local politician asked rhetorically “isn’t it the duty of a doctor to
destroy these microbes?” (Balakian 2008: 160). Hitler spoke of the “Jewish virus” and that “by eliminating the pest,
[he would] do humanity a service” (Bauman 1989: 71). Not only medical terms were used to justify the killings.
Gardening metaphors can also be found. In Rwanda, the chopping up of Tutsi men was called “bush clearing” and
slaughtering women and children was labelled as “pulling out the roots of the bad weeds” (Prunier 1997: 142). These
three examples support Bauman’s theory that the Enlightenment brought about the idea of being able to socially
engineer a perfect state. Genocide was consequently justified by the idea of “purifying” the state through tasks that a doctor or a gardener would employ in order to improve an unhealthy body or a garden.
Explanation: Your welcome by the way
Answer:
Genocide is the act in which one kills everybody who stands in their path. They may believe that said people are out to get them, so they must get rid of them first so that they can survive. They may do this due to mental health issues, regret, vengeance, or even just to do it. Genocide does not always have an explanation, but it is very important to find who is committing said act in time before more die. These criminals may be a serial killer looking for something to fill some kind of void in their lives where someone left them with. They may even just be seeking thrill! Some people kill just for the rush in their adrenalin! While one may think this is absurd, it seems to be pretty common. look at H.H. Holmes (Henry Howard Holmes). He built a mansion, known as the murder mansion, in which had several traps. A few of these traps were doors that led to brick walls, stair cases that led no where, and even gas-filled hotel rooms. He was convicted as a serial killer and was sentenced to death, surprisingly for only one murder. He died on May 7th, 1896.
I hope this helps! I learned about him in criminal justice II, so I really hope it's okay enough for a good grade! have a nice day!!
Complete each claim based on your understanding of how jungle law affects the characters of "Mowgli's Brothers" in The Jungle Book.
respects the law of the jungle, even though the law says he must die.
bends the law of the jungle to get what he wants.
The law of the jungle helps protect
from those who wish him harm.
By following the law of the jungle,
is able to save Mowgli.
Answer:
I jut got them all right so i hope this helps! :))
Explanation:
respects the law of the jungle, even though the law says he must die. - Akela
bends the law of the jungle to get what he wants. - Shere Khan
The law of the jungle helps protect from those who wish him harm. - Mowgli
By following the law of the jungle, able to save Mowgli. - Bagheera
Answer:
A(respects the law of the jungle, even though the law says he must die)
Explanation:
hope it is correct :)
What are some reasons that authors write about history?
If the United States was founded on equal rights, why have so many people had to struggle for equal rights since its founding?
Answer:
On Wednesday, Virginia became the 38th state to vote to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment — thus fulfilling the requirement that three-quarters of the states must approve an Amendment in order to add it to the U.S. Constitution. Since the Amendment was proposed a century ago, the U.S. has never been so close to enshrining the equality of all people, regardless of sex, in its bedrock legal document.
But that doesn’t mean the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) will be added to the Constitution any time soon. There will likely be a long fight in the courts or in the U.S. legislature before that happens, as the legislators who originally passed the Amendment in 1972 set, and then extended, a time limit for ratification by the states. That deadline passed more than three decades ago.
Decades would pass before the Equal Rights Amendment would gain real momentum. By that point, both men and women had won protections in the workplace, and the women of the second-wave feminist movement — including some who had participated in the fight for civil rights in the 1960s — were pushing for equality in their jobs, universities and homes. The Equal Rights Amendment was written by Alice Paul (1885-1977), the founder of the National Woman’s Party.
Born to a New Jersey family of Quakers who highly valued education, Paul studied at colleges and universities in the U.S. and the United Kingdom and earned an impressive number of degrees, including a Master’s and doctorate in sociology from the University of Pennsylvania, a law degree from Washington College of Law, and law Master’s and doctoral degrees from American University. But her life’s work really came into focus after she joined demonstrations for the British suffragist movement in the early 1900s. When she returned to the U.S. in 1910, she pushed American suffragists to try the confrontational techniques she’d seen applied in Britain, including civil disobedience.
Concerned that the National American Woman Suffrage Association was too moderate, in 1913 Paul and Lucy Burns formed the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage, which was later reconstituted as the National Woman’s Party, and employed more aggressive tactics. The group used parades, petitions, protests and pickets to push for the right to vote. In 1917, Paul was sentenced to seven months in prison for picketing the White House, and was force-fed after going on a prison hunger strike.
After women successfully won the right to vote in 1920, the National Woman’s Party turned its attention to the next steps. Jessica Neuwirth, a women’s rights lawyer and a founder of the ERA Coalition, a current-day campaign to pass the amendment, tells TIME that suffrage advocates saw their work as remedying the intentional omission of women from the U.S. Constitution.
Paul’s crusade in the 1920s was unsuccessful, but in the 1950s, Michigan Congresswoman Martha Griffiths took up the torch. A former judge elected to the House in 1954, Griffiths worked to have sex discrimination added to Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and pushed the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to double down on its enforcement of the Act. She also introduced the amendment on the House floor every year, but was unsuccessful until 1970, when Griffiths filed a discharge position that forced the legislation out of committee and led to the amendment being passed by the House. Although the Senate failed to pass it that legislative session, Griffiths reintroduced it the following year. It passed the House on Oct. 12, 1971 and the Senate on March 22, 1972. In passing the Equal Rights Amendment, Congress had set a seven-year deadline for ratification.
“Well, if you fast forward to 2019, without the Equal Rights Amendment having passed, we’re trying to figure out how to deal with bathrooms in a multi-gendered universe. And we’re trying to figure out, should in fact women be drafted if men are drafted?” says Condit. ”And while we were are unsettled as a culture about these new questions, they did not fail to emerge because we didn’t have an Equal Rights Amendment.” \
Condit notes that many of the states that failed to pass the Equal Rights Amendment had few women in their state legislatures, and historically had poor records of protecting the rights of both women and people of color. Virginia legislators’ decision to approve the Equal Rights Amendment means that the Amendment has fulfilled the requirement for three-fourths of the states to ratify a Constitutional Amendment. However, the ERA still faces another major obstacle: a past Congress had set a deadline for the Amendment’s ratification.
Going forward, that means that Congress could potentially vote to eliminate the deadline, or it could be challenged in court. Although American women have made significant gains in equality since the 1970s — and certainly since the 1920s — advocates say that an Equal Rights Amendment could still have a profound effect on the law and on American society.
Explain:
Read the excerpt from “On Women’s Right to Vote,” an 1873 speech by Susan B. Anthony.
It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union. And we formed it, not to give the blessings of liberty, but to secure them; not to the half of ourselves and the half of our posterity, but to the whole people—women as well as men.
Which quotation correctly uses ellipsis to shorten Anthony’s words?
It was we, the people . . . the whole people, who formed the Union. And we formed it, not to give the blessings of liberty, but to secure them; not to the half of ourselves and the half of our posterity, but to the whole people—women as well as men.
It was we, the people . . . not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union. And we formed it, not to give the blessings of liberty, but to secure them; not to the half of ourselves and the half of our posterity . . . .
It was we . . . the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union. And we formed it, not to give the blessings of liberty, but to secure them; not to the half of ourselves and the half of our posterity, but to the whole people—women as well as men.
It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union. And we formed it, not to give the blessings of liberty . . . to the whole people—women as well as men.
Answer:
D. It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union. And we formed it, not to give the blessings of liberty . . . to the whole people—women as well as men.
Explanation:
In the last sentence, Susan originally said, "And we formed it, not to give the blessings of liberty, but to secure them; not to the half of ourselves and the half of our posterity, but to the whole people—women as well as men." This phrase was correctly shortened using the ellipsis because it can be understood what she said by using context clues while the others are hard to understand.
Hope this helps :)
What did the author of "The Cold Equations" most likely want you to believe? What examples from the story make you think this? Explain your answer in three to five sentences. (10 points)
Answer:
Explanation:
The author of “The Cold Equations” most likely wants you to believe that Marilyn was supposed to get thrown overboard. She was threatened to be killed and this excerpt clearly shows the idea , so it will definitely help you:
“You mean it — you really mean it.” She sagged back against the wall, small and limp like a little rag doll,and all the protesting and disbelief gone. “You’re going to do it — you’re going to make me die?” “I’m sorry,” he said again. “You’ll never know how sorry I am. It has to be that way and no human in the universe can change it.”
HELP ME ASAP.....
Make Some Short Pharagraph That Comparison About DRAGON and SOLDIER
100%
Read the paragraph
Louis Pasteur, one of the most famous scientists of all time, was born in 1822 in France. Pasteur is remembered for developing vaccines that
helped stop the spread of anthrax and rables. Pasteur worked many years to perfect his work and, although people cruelly taunted him and would
not believe he was right, he succeeded.
What does the word taunted mean in this story?
1. praised
2. doubted
3. believed
4 mocked
option 3 belived
because in sentence say the meaning
Read the excerpt from chapter 6 of Animal Farm.
Every Monday Mr. Whymper visited the farm as had been arranged. He was a sly-looking little man with side whiskers, a solicitor in a very small way of business, but sharp enough to have realized earlier than anyone else that Animal Farm would need a broker and that the commissions would be worth having. The animals watched his coming and going with a kind of dread, and avoided him as much as possible.
How does the pacing of this passage move the plot forward?
The quick pace makes readers suspenseful and confused about Mr. Whymper.
The quick pace allows the author to pass an uneventful period of time quickly.
The slow pace helps to place emphasis on the animals’ dread of Mr. Whymper.
The slow pace helps develop Mr. Whymper’s character with descriptive details.
Answer: A
Explanation:
Answer:
d
Explanation:
The slow pace helps develop Mr. Whymper’s character with descriptive details. I took the test and got it right
Plz help me the teach is there too
Answer:
The answer would be the third option.
Explanation:
If you read a bit further, you see that she has answered questions like this repeatedly.
can anyone like write about your experience on the way home from school. in 1 page pls
Answer:
sup
Explanation:
well i walk home
its a nice alone time
when its sunny when its raining i always like the walk home
its quiet
and i can just plug my headphones in and listen to music for that 20min walk
when i listen to my music everythign around me just dissolves away
its just me and my music and my surroundings
i dont rly have too many friends so no i dont go over to anyone's house after school
walking back from my school i have two difrerent routes
one is walking through town whcih is crowded noisy and a shorter route
and the other is taking the nice side paths and just having a quiet place to just be with myself for once
and yeah i typically take the side paths but occassionally ya girl needs coffee so we gotta go through town ahahah
but yeah my walk home from school is very calming and its good exercise too
also i can walk at my own pace cuz everyone says i walk too slow for them but i can just be myself
its pretty awesome
Think about the injustice that you will write about for your essay. Write a sentence that describes what your claim is and why it is important to you. here you go
Answer: I think standing up to whatdhe ceh cer
Explanation:good
Answer:
I am writing about standing up to bullies because it is harmful to victims and promotes violence. I'm writing about this topic because I have seen people harmed by bullying.
To find clues to the main idea, you should read the
A. last sentence
B. first sentence
C. questions
D. first paragraph
The evidence in Sentence 3 is—
Answer:
wheres the sentence
Explanation:
Read these sentences from paragraph 4 of the
speech to answer the question that follows.
[W]e have vowed that we shall not see it governed by
a hostile flag of conquest, but by a banner of freedom
and peace. We have vowed that we shall not see
space filled with weapons of mass destruction, but
with instruments of knowledge and understanding.
How do Kennedy's two sets of opposing ideas
contribute to his purpose in these sentences?
O A. by contrasting his motivations with those of
other explorers
O B. by weighing the benefits of space exploration
against its dangers
OC by emphasizing the potential dangers of failing
to be first in space
OD by creating a warning tone about the dangers
of space exploration
Answer:
A
Explanation:
He shows that other explorers don't have the same motivations as him, but he will try and use space exploration for good and not for evil.
Choose all of the correct answer to this question.
How does Obama's strengthen his overall argument?
By speaking long enough that the audience just agrees with him.
Consistently refutes the examples of challenges with examples of opportunity and success to
strengthen his argument that the dedication to an education is vital to personal success.
Refutes claims that a student's current status determines where they will end up.
By explaining that students can overcome challenges in their life and giving examples from his
own life.
D) By explaining that students can overcome challenges in their life and giving examples from his own life.
The prince is furious for 2 reasons. What are they?
Answer:
1. because he wanted to be a king
2. because his diaper wasn't changed
At which point in the passage does Becky's tone change from contemptuous to regretful?
1. when she forgets "she ever was young"
02. when she realizes "I could not go back"
03. when she notes "I was little better than a servant"
4. when she asks if she is "much better to do now in the world"
lol help me pls
Answer:
its number 2
Explanation:
02. when she realizes "I could not go back"
hope this helps :)
True/False: Every body paragraph in an argumentative essay must include a topic sentence stating a reason that supports the assertion (claim) in the thesis statement.
Answer:
i dont know sorry man, i got the same question
Explanation:
PLS HELP I WILL MARK BRAINLIEST!!!!!!!!!!
"Well, this is a fine how-do-you-do. I come all the way over here to introduce my friends, R.W. and Melvin, to y'all and y'all actin' like y'all ain't got no manners at all. Yeah, ole R.W. and Melvin," he said, rolling the Simmses' names slowly off his tongue to bring to our attention that he had not bothered to place a "Mister" before either, "they been mighty fine friends to me. Better than any of y'all. Look, see here what they give me." Proudly he tugged at the suit coat. "Pretty nice stuff, eh? Everything I want they give me 'cause they really likes me. I'm they best friend."
What do T. J.’s actions indicate?
He dislikes that his old friends never bought him things.
He is showing off his new friends’ generosity.
He feels sorry that his old friends do not have nice things.
He is angry about the way his old friends treated him.
Answer:
B
Explanation:
can i have brainly plz
Select the response that best completes each sentence about structure and suspense. Characters and conflicts are introduced . Tension builds through a series of . The key to suspense is to resolve the conflict .
Answer:
1. Characters and conflicts are introduced at the beginning of the work.
2. Tension builds through a series of conflicts.
3. The key to suspense is to resolve the conflict near the end of the work.
Explanation:
The characters and conflicts of a literary work must be presented at the beginning of the work as they allow the reader to identify them and establish interest in the personality of each character and in how they will resolve the conflicts in which they are involved. These conflicts are presented progressively in the work and the more conflicts are presented the more the tension increases. The solution to these conflicts must be found near the end of the narrative because it holds the reader in the work and generates suspense.
Answer:
Characters and conflicts are introduced EARLY IN THE PLAY
Tension builds through a series of CONFLICTS
The key to suspense is to resolve the conflict NEAR THE END OF THE PLAY
Explanation:
https://brainly.com/question/16204177
It is not smart to be quiet and hold your silence in the face of injustice and oppression. It is not smart to hurl insults and throw stones at those who are bent on oppressing you. It is however smart and intelligent to speak truth to power with no regret. TRUTH OVERPOWERS
Answer:
amen I like the positivity
( ELA , 9TH GRADE )
Which of the following are elements that convey tone? Select all that apply.
voice
vocabulary
setting
characters
Answer:
voice, vocabulary, setting
Explanation:
those convey tone efficiency characters Don't convey tone.
timed please helpWhich of the following sentences shows that Maya is making a contrast?
The first article is written with an informal tone, but the second is very formal.
Both articles include the Grand Canyon as a very famous US landmark.
Each author gives a list of favorite landmarks found in North America.
These articles are both written to help travelers locate famous landmarks.
Answer:
1st
Explanation:
informal and formal tones make a contrast because they are different tones
Answer: Both articles include the Grand Canyon as a very famous US landmark.
Explanation: the sentence compares that both articles include the same topic
In Oscar Wilde's play The Importance of Being Earnest, Jack lives a double life; known as Jack Worthing at home in the country and as his own younger brother Earnest Worthing in London society. He finds himself in love with Gwendolen, his friend Algernon's cousin, so he confides in Algernon about his true identity, and the young ward that he cares for in the county. Algernon then travels to the county posing as Earnest Worthing and falls in love with Jack's ward Cecily. When the two women meet they quickly discover that they are both engaged to Earnest Worthing, and that Earnest Worthing does not exist, but they eventually decide that a name is not as important as the person behind the name. Both men learn that honesty is always best. What effect does this sequence of events most likely have on the text?
Question 1 options:
It creates humor since both men are pretending to be the same fictional character.
It creates tension since both women think they are engaged to Earnest Worthing.
It creates surprise since both women find out that they are engaged to a different man who called himself Earnest Worthing.
It creates mystery about who Earnest Worthing really is.
tips on memorizing books?
Answer:
re reading repeating
Explanation:
SOMEONE PLS HELP ME! THIS question is from “The walrus and the Carpenter” iLL Mark BRAINLIEST
Answer:
C
Explanation:
How does the rhythm of "The New Colossus" contribute to the poem's meaning?
It creates a steady pace that reinforces the strength of the statue.
It creates a choppy pace that reflects the uncertainty of life.
It creates a slow pace that emphasizes the mournful tone of the poem.
It creates a quick pace that emphasizes the celebratory tone of the poem.
Answer:
A.
But according to my own version of the ELA quiz:
B.
Explanation:
I took an ELA quiz and got it 100% correct! Have a perfect day/night!
Rhythm creates a choppy pace that reflects the uncertainty of life. Hence, option B is correct.
What is rhythm?In poetry, rhythm refers to the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables within a line or stanza. It is a crucial aspect of the poem's overall sound and musicality, and it can greatly affect the reader's experience of the work. Poets can create a wide variety of rhythms and meters, which can affect the tone, mood, and overall impact of the poem.
Rhythm creates a choppy pace that reflects the uncertainty of life, this is how it contributes to the poem's meaning in "the new Colossus".
Learn more about rhythm, here:
https://brainly.com/question/13999950
#SPJ2
HELP MEEE
6.
What type of word is underlined in the following sentence?
The completed meal was so delicious everyone wanted more.
a gerund
a preposition
an infinitive
a participle
Answer:
I think its d
Explanation:
Answer:
The answer is an infinitive.
Explanation: