Yes it is actually because they both do the same stuff
The wish that Emperor Vespasian granted to Yohanan Ben Zakkai was B. To preserve the sacred scrolls and texts.
<h3>What did Yohanan Ben Zakkai do?</h3>
When Israel rebelled against the Romans, Emperor Vespasian came to Israel to destroy it. When he got to Jerusalem, he told the people to give up and that he would spare them if they did.
They refused but Yohanan Ben Zakkai tried to reason with them. When they agains refused, Yohanan Ben Zakkai spoke to Vespasian and asked that the sacred scrolls and texts be preserved. He granted this wish and kept it after the fall of Jerusalem.
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The correct answer to this open question is the following.
The two sentences in which you identify the main idea would be these.
Mother nature is so smart that she knows how to constantly rebuilt and regenerate itself. To the human eyes, a fire hurts so much. We think that fires destroy nature. But as in the case of fires or heavy rains, the purpose is to clean what must be cleaned.
Maybe this comparison would help. It is like us, the humans. We often need to clean ourselves by having showers. Once in a while, a flue, a minor stomach pain helps us to remove energies that don't serve us.
It is exactly the same as mother nature. Once in a while, she needs fires, hurricanes, strong winds, heavy rains, or earthquakes to remove bad energy.
The supporting detail of this paragraph would be<em> "Fire also may kill predatory insects or pests that live on and damage otherwise healthy trees."</em>
Answer:
The main unintended consquence of the policy of glasnot (which means "transparency" in Russian) was that it led to criticism from the nations of the Soviet Union, towards the central leadership in Moscow.
Leaders in the Baltics, the Caucasus, Central Asia, Ukraine, and Belarus began to criticize the soviet leadership in Moscow. In these "peripheral nations", people felt that the central government was pro Russia, or that they were essentially russian colonies.
These criticisms devolved into full blown rebellions, which led to the break up of the Soviet Union by 1991.