This statement is TRUE.
A counterculture is defined as a cultural system whose norms and behaviors differ from the ones generally accepted in mainstream society. Countercultural movements emerge inside those mainstream societies, mainly because some groups of people stop sharing the generally accepted principles and become critical to them. In fact, such movements can be the starting point of dramatic cultural changes.
- Organized crime is a manner of subculture which shows disrespect for the mainstream rules and functions according to a different and own system. Therefore it is a counterculture.
- The hippie movement was the main counterculture of the 1960s-1970s. It was an anti-establishment phenomenon and was very visible during the Civil Rights Movement and in the protests that opposed the US policies in Vietnam.
The development of barbed wire in the 1870s changed the cattle ranching industry by allowing the cattle ranching owners that have large ranches to enclose their own territory in which allowed them from eliminating the possible competition in regards of the resources. It is because the barbed wire in the 1870s serves as an important tool that ranchers could use as a way of protecting their animals in the barn from predators capable of killing their animals and from also preventing other people from trespassing without their permission.
Answer: Inattentional blindness
Explanation: Simply this phenomenon occurs due to the perceptual preoccupation with certain subjects, in this case white shirts, which is why they do not see certain phenomena, although they are within the field of view of the participants. That is why this blindness is also called perceptual blindness. In other words, participants' perceptions were influenced by being told to focus only on white shirts, and their perception was somehow "directed". Because of this, half of the participants did not see man wearing the black gorilla costume, if he was in some white costume, the participants would probably have seen him.
Answer:
no
Explanation:
i have never ever thought
I truly think that the beat way we can improve nationality and a better sense of comunity for america is sticking together