Answer:
we should not
Explanation:
maybe because it waste a lot of time to people
Answer:
Israel should protect itself from Palestine like how each and every nation protects itself. By providing security to their own people, and taking the fight to them. Palestine has unofficially declared war and has always been warring against Israel, and failed to compromise in any way. All they look for is the destruction of the Jews and them being able to take the lands. Their tactics of destroying the Jews is similar to terrorists, and ideological similar to the Nazi's, the terrorism and sui-cide bombers, and the ideology that all "inferiors" and "jews" must die.
To be able to protect themselves, the Israelites must provide security for their citizens, and to be able to take the fight to the Palestines (which they cannot do, as the U.N. would not allow them too. However, sometimes just providing security is not enough, and Israel must fall on the old saying: "The best defense is a good offense." [Art of War].
Until Palestine learns and uses peace, or until the extinction of one or another people group, the Middle East will not experience peace.
The answer is periphery in the visual field. This affects the individuals senses such as the person's smell, hearing, sight and feeling in which they usually think that something exist that aren't real and are only happening because it only exists in the person's mind.
Answer:
Precipitation varies greatly, from an average of less than five inches annually over the Great Salt Lake Desert (west of Great Salt Lake), to more than 40 inches in some parts of the Wasatch Mountains. The average annual precipitation in the leading agricultural areas is between 10 to 15 inches, necessitating irrigation for the economic production of most crops. However, the mountains, where winter snows form the chief reservoirs of moisture, are conveniently adjacent to practically all farming areas, and there is usually sufficient water for most land under irrigation. The areas of the State below an elevation of 4,000 feet, all in the southern part, generally receive less than 10 inches of moisture annually.
Northwestern Utah, over and along the mountains, receives appreciably more precipitation in a year than is received at similar elevations over the rest of the State, primarily due to terrain and the direction of normal storm tracks. The bulk of the moisture falling over that area can be attributed to the movement of Pacific storms through the region during the winter and spring months. In summer northwestern Utah is comparatively dry. The eastern portion receives appreciable rain from summer thunderstorms, which are usually associated with moisture-laden air masses from the Gulf of Mexico.
Snowfall is moderately heavy in the mountains, especially over the northern part. This is conducive to a large amount of winter sports activity, including skiing and hunting. While the principal population centers along the base of the mountains receive more snow, as a rule, than many middle and northeastern sections of the United States, a deep snow cover seldom remains long on the ground.
Runoff from melting mountain snow usually reaches a peak in April, May or early June, and sometimes causes flooding along the lower streams. However, damaging floods of this kind are infrequent. Flash floods from summer thunderstorms are more frequent, but they affect only small, local areas.
Explanation: