Hedda it's comparing her love to Tesman with the moon.
The natural fondness led to the domestication of pets like dogs. ... Many people no longer care about what happens to other humans The loyalty and the positive behaviors from pets make people feel comfortable around them.
I hope you understand.
The third statement is false. The Space Race was presented in a way that engaged the entire nation.
Literature and the Holocaust have a complicated relationship. This isn't to say, of course, that the pairing isn't a fruitful one—the Holocaust has influenced, if not defined, nearly every Jewish writer since, from Saul Bellow to Jonathan Safran Foer, and many non-Jews besides, like W.G. Sebald and Jorge Semprun. Still, literature qua art—innately concerned with representation and appropriation—seemingly stands opposed to the immutability of the Holocaust and our oversized obligations to its memory. Good literature makes artistic demands, flexes and contorts narratives, resists limpid morality, compromises reality's details. Regarding the Holocaust, this seems unconscionable, even blasphemous. The horrors of Auschwitz and Buchenwald need no artistic amplification.