Indeed cities should be required to have detailed evacuation plans
> We cannot provide specific textual evidence because you forgot to attach the passage. However, we can comment on the following.
> Every city should have a very thought-out plan to evacuate the citizens in case of a natural disaster.
> In the absence of this plan, citizens are at the mercy of luck, and that is no good.
> Every local and state government should foster the culture of prevention instead of only reacting when the problem has arisen.
> Natural disasters did not warn you. They hit a city and if people are not prepared to act, what follows is panic and chaos.
We can conclude that every city should create the proper evacuation plan and have simulacrums or rehearsals so people could know how to act in order to prevent tragedies.
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Answer:
A). "And to speak truth of Caesar, / I have not known when his affections swayed / More than his reason."
D). “And since the quarrel / Will bear no colour for the thing he is”
E). “And therefore think him as a serpent’s egg / Which, hatched, would as his kind grow mischievous, / And kill him in the shell.”
Explanation:
In the given excerpt from Julius Caesar, the options A, D, and E(as mentioned above) reveals as well as supports the idea that Brutus found it necessary to kill Caesar before he could become dangerous for any one. <u>The first quotation('And to....reason') reveals that Brutus had no idea when Caesar transforms into an emotional being from a rational and responsible man</u>('affections sway his reason'). The next quote('And since..he is') discloses that Brutus considered <u>Caesar to be incapable of handling power sensibly once he acquires it.</u> The third quotation('and therefore...shell') reveals the final support to Brutus view that <u>he would become like a 'serpent's egg' after attaining power and become more harmful and threatening</u> . Thus, he must be killed before that and hence, <u>options A, D, and E</u> are the correct answers.
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Epimetheus places his inquiry or question in a category which prevents people from answering him as they are too polite.
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The answer is: to suggest the hopelessness of Zeitoun’s situation.
In the excerpt from "Zeitoun," the author Dave Eggers makes reference to Zeitoun's feeling of devastation as the sees New Orleans underwater after hurricane Katrina. For instance, the narrator describes how the whole city is submerged and that nothing other than water can be seen around Zeitoun's tent. The protagonist also looks for people, animals or machines moving, but he sees nothing until the helicopter flies around.