Fiction:<em> </em>A tiger, a lion, or any strong animal will judge us the most. In their eyes, humans would be weak and small. "Our children grow just a bit and then they're on their own. Most humans don't live in packs-we might. Our lionesses and tigers will hunt small things down-just because they all our weak." Says the strong animals. "That baby human is <em>crawling </em>while the others walk on their two! It's so silly!"
Maybe Truth: A tiger, a lion, or any strong animal will judge us the most. In their eyes, humans would be weak and small. They think their children are smarter, stronger, and better. Some will live in packs, like wolves or hyenas. Because of this, they find food from smaller animals. In their language, they might tease us- because of the baby's cry, because of the children's immature-ness, because of the adult's forgetting-ness...
Brainliest?
<span>Tom maintains his miserly attitude at the very end, even so far as to deny that he has profited from his work as a usurer. It is fitting that the devil arrives in this moment at Tom's "invitation" to take him away to hell.</span>
<span>Parenthetical citations appear at the end, while the works cited page appears throughout the paper</span>
Answer:
Recent weeks have produced a lifetime’s worth of haunting images. Some of them everyone has seen: black-clad “agents” hustling citizens into unmarked vans, “counterdemonstrators” with automatic weapons dogging Black Lives Matter protests. Others I have seen in person: on a recent trip to Portland, Oregon, groups of mothers marching in front of a federal courthouse to protect protesters who had been gassed and beaten during previous demonstrations; on a stroll through a neighborhood park in my small hometown of Eugene, Oregon, a dozen masked “security guards” with assault rifles offering protection to anti-police-violence protesters.
And the backdrop to all these sights is the indelible image of a flag-draped coffin bearing the body of Representative John Lewis on his final trip—this one over a path strewn with rose petals—across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, in Selma, Alabama.
Lewis’s cortege recalled a scene from half a century ago—one that echoed strangely amid the alarms and cries of this haunted July.
Adam Serwer: John Lewis was an American founder
On Sunday, March 7, 1965, Lewis and Hosea Williams led a peaceful crowd of some 600 marchers across