In context of her article, by intelligent citizens Liaugminas means the readers who do not just go with what they witness but figure out if it sounds valid and researched.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Sheila Gribben Liaugminas tries to explain the various biased insights of media and news. In her article "How the media twists the news", she argues the need to look deeper into what the news gives to the world and not just believe it.
In context of her article, by intelligent citizens Liaugminas means the readers who do not just go with what they witness but figure out if it sounds valid and researched.
The meaning of this term changes her initial definition of intelligent  news consumers and effective in her call to action using this term is she requests every reader and public to be an intelligent citizen and consumers of what the receive from the media, she asks the public to act on false news instead of believing it..
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
maby this will help
Explanation:
that one day that i first saw him standing thiermy heart lept out of my chest. it wasent until later that i finaly relized that we were ment to be.ok so this is proboply not how it happend. so truth to be told we kind of were rivals like as in forever. but it turns out that we were not so diffrent  i mean we were both on the guys soccer team.yeah not the best way to meet people. I mean im a girl and kind of beat my former rival at a sport he has been playing his whole life.
 
        
             
        
        
        
The answer to this question is yes.
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Explanation:
Women in space have been present and active since the beginning of human spaceflight. The first woman flew to space in 1963, two years after the first person, but it was not until almost 20 years later that more would be sent. 
 Since then a considerable number of women from a range of countries have worked in space, though overall women are still significantly less often chosen to go to space than men and represent by 2020 only 10% of all astronauts who have been to space.By 2021 most of the 65 women who have been to space, have been United States citizens, with missions on the Space Shuttle and on the International Space Station. Other countries have had one (United Kingdom, France, South Korea, Italy) or two (USSR, Canada, Japan, Russia, China) women citizens in space, taking part in missions of programs with human spaceflight capability.
 Additionally one dual Iranian-US woman citizen has participated as tourist on an US mission. It has even been concluded that women might be better suited for longer space missions.[3] The main obstacle for women to go to space remains gender discrimination.