The correct option is the third one.
Genocide is defined as deliberately killing people for religious, ethnic, or political reasons.
Genocide is the extermination of a national, political, ethnical or religious groups. As the other options do not refer to the extermination or killing of any type of group, they are not related to the term "genocide".
Answer:
b. contrast
Explanation:
This example is missing its options. The options for this question are:
A. distributional
B. contrast
C. horns
D. leniency
E. halo
In psychology and usually in recruitment and processes of interviewing candidates for a job, the contrast error is a type of bias that occurs when the evaluation we make of a person is influenced by the impression that the previous persons made on us. In other words, the previous candidates and the impression they made on us set a benchmark that we will use to evaluate the other candidates and therefore, we'll be comparing the latter with the first ones.
In this example, Benny needs to assess Amanda's performance and he rates her as a good performer. However, then Benny thinks about an exceptional employee, Christina, and decides than compared with her, Amanda is just average. We can see that <u>the impression Christina is making on Benny is affecting the evaluation he is making of Amanda's performance since Amanda is setting a higher benchmark (since she is exceptional) that Benny is using to compare Amanda. </u>Therefore, Benny's rating is a contrast error.
In interview or performance appraisal process, error caused by the effect of previously interviewed or appraised applicants on the interviewer. It results in a conscious or subconscious comparison of one applicant with another, and tends to exaggerate the differences between the two.
Right to trial is the answer
Answer: the correct answer is B The statute is the least restrictive means of advancing the state's compelling interest in ending discrimination by groups using public facilities.
Explanation:
While schools are generally not public forums, they may become a designated public forum by being held open to student groups for meetings. In that case, the First Amendment may be violated if a college restricts use of its classrooms based on the content of a student group's speech.
To justify content-based regulation of otherwise protected speech, the government must show that the regulation is necessary to achieve a compelling state interest that cannot be satisfied by less restrictive means.
Similarly, the right to associate for expressive purposes is not absolute. At the very least, the right may be infringed to serve a compelling government interest, unrelated to the suppression of ideas, that cannot be achieved through means significantly less restrictive of associational freedoms.