The answer to this question is True
Ethical Speaking is a branch in Ethics which urges public speakers to engages incredible and honest speeches. It is commonly applied in politics, where candidates normally lead numerous public speeches throughout the campaign and subsequently, while in office.
Ethical Speaking requires the transmitter of the message to be honest and avoid plagiarism, or the practice of taking passages of others rhetoric or ideas into one's own speech. Political candidates normally feel tempted to say what the people "want to hear". However, this leads to negative consequences in the middle term, as they are unable to comply with the proposals they made during their speeches once they are in office.
The correct answer is: "The Tragedy of the Commons".
The Tragedy of the Commons refers to the depletion of public goods and resources, to which all individuals have equal and open access, when each individual uses or consumes them attending to his personal interest and disregarding the survival of the resource. Such behaviour goes against the welfare of the totality of users, and even against the long-run interest of the individual, as if the resources is extinguished he will not be able to use it in the future either.
For example, fishing-stocks are overexploited, because each fisher captures a larger amount than they should if they wished to maintain their rate of reproduction and, as a result, in same years there will be no fish at all. But, instead, fishers are moved by their individual interests, by the desire of maximizing the profits gained by selling the fish, and in order to do so they capture everyday as much fish as they can. They would never set an upper bound to their captures, thinking about the higher purpouse of preserving the fishing-stock.
Answer:
C seems the most reasonable
Explanation: