Answer:
d. Antisocial personality disorder
Explanation:
Antisocial personality disorder: In abnormal psychology, the term antisocial personality disorder is referred to as a mental condition or mental illness that is explained in terms of an individual consisting of a long-term pattern of exploiting, manipulating, or violating the rights of the other person without showing any remorse or guilt. 
An individual experiencing antisocial personality disorder often finds difficulty in maintaining relationships at work and is considered to be criminal as well.
Symptoms: Persistent lying to exploit others, using charm to manipulate another person for personal gain, disregard for right and wrong, etc.
Causes: Environmental factors, genetic factors, etc.
In the question above, Ruth's behavior is consistent with that seen in antisocial personality disorder.                  
 
        
             
        
        
        
<span>The move over law applies not only to police and fire vehicles but also to </span>tow trucks.
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
E, The economy is in a recessionary gap when the short-run equilibrium real output is above the long-run equilibrium real output.
Explanation:
See attached picture.
Diagram is from Andrew McCarthy's "Digging a Little Deeper" website/ blog.
 
        
             
        
        
        
The Buddha tried to but didn't escape into enlightenment after many months of meditation and starving himself and becoming poor and that's when he found that when you have nothing you have no worries and when you have nothing you have everything and that is when he found enlightenment
        
             
        
        
        
Nepal moved from unitary system with a three-level federal system of government. As federalism accelerates, the national health system can also speed up its own decentralization process, reduce disparities in access, and improve health outcomes. Federalism is a compromise meant to eliminate the disadvantages of both systems. In a federal system, power is shared by the national and state governments. The Constitution designates certain powers to be the domain of a central government, and others are specifically reserved to the state governments.