Kenneth’s cognitive development is compromised.
As a result of his environment, Kenneth’s cognitive
development has been strained and hence compromised. Exposure to all these dilapidating
conditions exerts negative and detrimental effects on Kenneth’s emotional well-being
which consequently affects his mental well-being.
Answer: Option (D) is correct
Explanation:
Economic efficiency is referred to as the situation where all commodities and factors of production residing within an economy are allocated or distributed in most efficient way in order to eliminate or minimize waste. It also implies to an state(economical) where resources are being optimally allocated in order to serve individuals or other entity in best way possible while trying to minimize inefficiency and waste.
Trump was a real-estate developer and businessman who owned, managed, or licensed his name to several hotels, casinos, golf courses, resorts, and residential properties in the New York City area and around the world.
I believe the answer is: Divided government
With this system, the losing party could take the opposition stand from the winning party. Even though this might make the government activities become more complicated, it would prevent one party from obtaining too much power within the government.
Answer:
a. It outlined the principles of civil disobedience.
Explanation:
Written by Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., the "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" represents the most emblematic document of the struggle for civil rights of the African American minority of the United States. In it, King fraternally answers the open letter (A Call for Unity) of eight clergymen asking the population to withdraw their support for foreign-led protests — referring to the organization “Conference for Christian Leadership in the South,” chaired by the Reverend. In their “Call to Unity,” published in a local newspaper, clerics (all white) complain that mobilizations do not help solve “racial problems” and argue that it is possible to propose a constructive approach that addresses rights in the courts, not in the streets. It is, somehow, a cold and distant call to the patience of "his" black community. Those who subscribe to the message qualify the protests led by the foreign reverend as foolish and inopportune.
Rather than being a thorough response to the criticism launched by local clergy to the protests, the "Letter from a Birmingham jail" is an effective plea - written under conditions of enormous symbolic burden - in which the Reverend <u>King seeks to expose the nature of its direct nonviolent action program and its justification</u>. In his communication, the reverend points out that the mobilizations seek to create a crisis that brings to the surface injustices that cannot be neglected any longer. Protests do not create tension, as their censors think, they expose it starkly.
According to King, civil disobedience is legitimate not only because it is a moral duty to oppose laws that are considered unfair, but because the legal consequences of transgressing order are openly accepted. By using his person, his freedom, to call attention to the existence of injustice, the civil disobedient appeals to the solidarity consciousness of the community. The social protest does not violate the order to blackmail the system but peacefully seeks to shake those who with their apathy and silence become accomplices.