The Oregon trail
Reason: Gold
<span>There's not really any pros for propaganda because essentially what you are doing is lying to get someone to believe something. I guess you could say a pro is that gullible people will believe you, but that's an unethical pro. The cons are that it usually causes much controversy in a society where there's not supposed to be a bias in the government. Propaganda in its true form is never a good thing. It is unethical in the sense that it takes advantage of people who are too lazy to do research and quick to believe what someone tells them. One example I like to use is many of these independent "news" websites. On both ends of the political spectrum, left and right, you find websites that have articles so heavily weighed down with that wings propaganda that true news becomes less and less visible. Occupy Democrats is one textbook example of that. Their articles are so left leaning that you read an article and are immediately left with a left leaning impression. Same goes for a lot of right wing websites. I'm not going to say "always" but propaganda 99.9 percent of the time is not good. Instead of people doing their own research to decide their view on something, propaganda </span>tells<span> people what they should think versus the </span><span>asking </span><span>people what they think</span>
Answer:
The correct way to answer the question: According to the theory of new classical economics, if business sentiment and investment spending decreases, the aggregate demand curve: shifts to the left and the price level falls, while aggregate output: decreases.
Explanation:
The balance of an economy, anywhere in the world, is pretty complex thing. In order to understand both the short-term, and long-term ways in which the economy of a country may respond to different factors, but most especially to GDP, which is the measure of how much, and how well, a country is producing and supplying a demand for certain goods and services, it is necessary to understand both a theory known as the short-term Keynesian analysis and also the neoclassical theory of economics, which applies to long-term macroeconomics. In the case shown above, the point of start is the potential GDP, which will mark the real GDP of a country. The second point is the aggregate supply and demand markers that indicate how an economy is doing with respect to potential GDP. If investement is not placed into an economy, and business sentiment decreasese, it means that productivity will drop, and the aggregate demand curve turns to the left as many other factors are also driven down. Since aggregate output means the amount that is produced in goods and services, the lesser the business interest and spending, the lesser production there will be.