The United States began regulating immigration soon after it won independence from Great Britain, and the laws since enacted have reflected the politics and migrant flows of the times. Early legislation tended to impose limits that favored Europeans, but a sweeping 1965 law opened doors to immigrants from other parts of the world. In more recent years, laws and presidential actions have been shaped by concerns about refugees, unauthorized immigration and terrorism.
Regulations uphold business activity laws
Public Safety Regulations put into practice the will of federal and state legislatures to make workplaces safer for the workers. Regulations put the minute into practice, like headphone requirements in noisy workplaces.
It is an overtly political work and functions as ideological criticism- this statement best describes Juan O' Gorman's mural Panel of the Independence–Father Hidalgo (Retablo de la Independencia–Hidalgo).
Option: B
Explanation:
Juan O' Gorman was an architect who designs various buildings in Mexico and spain. He was renowned cultural and historical heritage of Mexican civilization. It was an overtly political work and functions as ideological criticism of Father Hidalgo.
Though it was not an abstract expressionist work. Architectural work was actually a significant cultural and socio economic heritage holder of the civilization. It can not be detached from any specific cultural and historical context.
Answer:
(B) id-consists of primitive, instinctual urges superego-raw, inborn part of personality
Explanation:
Freud defines id, those primitive, instincts present in the infants mind, where sexual and aggressive drives locate, deeply hidden memories. It contains unconscious psychic energy that constantly expresses wishes to statisfy urges, basic needs or greater desires. The id seek pleasure permanently, with a ever present demand for immediate gratification.
To the contrary, the super ego is conscious and operates as a moral agent, contrasting with reality and acts as a negotiatior between this desires coming from the id
The id operates on shaping personality, as newborns, it lets us satisfy basic needs for survival. Freud strongly believed this is id will seek pleasure at any time without considerations of the reality of situation thus other mechanisms like super ego will later develop as one grows in presence of wider contexts and circumstances.
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