The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Unfortunately, you forgot to include the question. There is no question here, Just a statement.
What is your question? What do you want to know?
If this is a true or false question, then the correct answer is true.
It is true that someone who is a member of a larger group may begin to think or feel like other people in that group. This influence is known as social identification. Social identification is the process of defining oneself by characteristics shared with other people.
If your question is, "Based on the passage, which two examples are forms of social identification?"
Then the correct answer is "a farmer marching with other farmers to support amending an agricultural law," and "a woman who joins a women’s group to campaign for equal rights."
These are the correct answers because in each case, members join the groups, unions, or associations in order to fight for their rights. They have a common purpose and joining each respective group, they start to see more commonalities between the members. And this exemplifies the concept of social identification.
Answer:
One of the main ways in which the Townshend Acts affected many colonists was that They required colonists to pay taxes on several household items, which the colonists greatly resented. These taxes helped lead to the American Revolution.
Explanation:
it's what American Revolution was about
Trade barriers being abolished would increase trade to a great extent the positive aspects would be that consumer would have a variety of choice to chose from and the trade barriers being abolished means no duties and taxes so the cost of the imported good would be the same in exporting and importing country hence a benefit to the consumer moreover it has negative aspects as well that no duties for the importing country and hence the local producers would be negatively affected as their sales would go down as people would be consuming more of imported good than domestic goods.
Apple had recently released the world's first graphical user interface (GUI) computer, which had taken the world by storm. For the first several months, sales were spectacular. However, sales began to decline a few months later due to the machine's expensive price. Jobs approached John Sculley and informed him that the price of the Mac needed to be reduced. Before joining Apple, Sculley was the CEO of Pepsico, a corporation where solely sales and profits were used to measure a company's success. Apple was unique. They were more interested in innovation and technology, which Sculley could not identify. He informed Jobs that lowering the price of the Mac would limit the company's sales and revenues, which would be a poor move. This topic was raised during one of the board meetings, and everyone on the board agreed with John Sculley. The board of directors instructed Steve to either oversee the LISA division (which was essentially doing nothing) or quit, which was a diplomatic way of saying, either oversee the LISA division or you're fired. Jobs knew there was nothing left in LISA and hence he was fired from the company.