<u>Cartoonist Scott Adams, author of the Dilbert comic, writes of "cubicle cities," large areas with innumerable employees packed into individual workspaces separated by partial walls. In this workplace design</u>, density is increased. He writes in a satirical, often sarcastic, way about the social and psychological landscape of workers (white-collar) in modern business corporations. The Dilbert series came to national prominence through the downsizing period in 1990s America and was then distributed worldwide.
<em>Dilbert is the main character in the strip (a stereotypical technically-minded single male). He is a skilled engineer but has a poor social and romantic life.</em>
Answer:
Justice is important to Christians because the doctrine doesn’t support any form of retaliation or revenge for any wrongdoing. Instead Christians are told and encouraged by the Bible to always forgive one another of any deeds according to how God forgives us too.
Christianity talks about not putting law into one’s hands. This is why justice is valued by Christians when the perpetrators or guilty are punished by the relevant authorities.
1.
Answer:
After they broke in Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate, an office-hotel-apartment complex in Washington, D.C, burglars photograph campaign documents, put and installed the sophisticated electronic bugging equipment.
Explanation:
FBI and CIA hired agents broke into the offices of the Democratic Party and George McGovern to conduct illegal political espionage ordered out by the White House and the administration of the President Nixon, monitored by himself personally.
A former Treasury and FBI agent, G. Gordon Liddy and the E. Howard Hunt former CIA operative planned the Watergate break-in and recruited the burglars in behalf of the White House.
2.
Answer:
The Nixon campaign intended to use the illegally colected information on the oponent - the Democratic Party and George McGovern, to ensure Nixon's reelection in 1972.
Explanation:
NIxon'x Re-election Team (Committee to Re-Elect the President known as CREEP) has didcuded to go for the no limits and risky presidential campaign with tactics that included illegal espionage, stealing top-secret documents and abuse of presidential powers.
Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, with a support provided by anonymous whistleblower “Deep Throat” discovered involvement of White House and Nixon's administration in the number of illegal actions during Nixons re-election campaign.
The taxes were used to pay for the supplies to build this temple, so taxes were raised high and people were unhappy with the king.