<span>A. cultural diversity and its interaction with outsiders.</span>
In the context of symbolic interactionism, it the study of human conduct and human life. How one’s social life is formed and is being described by one’s perspective of self and others –community, society and etc. In this approach, these 3 views were asserted by Herbert Blumer (1969) as follows:
<span><span>1. </span>People act on a specific object based on how they see or construe it according to their outlook and attribution on the object.</span> <span><span>
2. </span>These certain outlooks and attribution that has been formed by an individual is shaped and reinforced by the people this individual is exposed to.</span> <span><span>
3. </span>These outlooks and attribution are continuously changed and altered based on one’s social environment.<span>
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Paul Bunyan & Babe at the Tourist Information Center
Located on the shore of Lake Bemidji stands the historic statues of the legendary lumberjack Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox. These towering icons proudly welcome visitors to the Tourist Information Center, a state of Minnesota Travel Affiliate.
The rain water is stored in their thick stems for summer droughts
Answer:
Some contend that Whites’ application of values to form opinions about race-conscious policy may constitute a subtle form of racism. Others challenge the new racism thesis, suggesting that racism and values are exclusive in their influence. Proponents of the thesis assert that many Whites’ attitudes about such policy are structured by a mix of racism and American individualism. The author suggests that an even more subtle form of racism may exist. Racism may actually be expressed in opposition to big government. The test results presented here indicate that the effects of limited-government values on attitudes about race-conscious policy are conditional on levels of racial prejudice for many Whites, whereas the effects on racially ambiguous social welfare policy attitudes are not. The author contends that these results provide support to the argument that racism still exists and has found a new subtle expression.