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Crazy boy [7]
2 years ago
13

The transition of society and men from the state of nature into the Leviathan demonstrates how the Right of Nature can be disman

tled by fear, resulting in the entrapment of society into an oppressively dominant, yet free, form of control called the Law of Nature.True / False.
Social Studies
1 answer:
Papessa [141]2 years ago
3 0

Answer:

True. In the time past, the society as it was known then was a free state in which people where not bound to any man made law but was left to the law of nature (most probaly law of karma). There was no law preventing people from moving from one location to another neither is there any one against killing of certain animals for feeding.

<em>Currently, that free society has been transformed into the Levianthan whereby the society has been entraped by a dominant form of control called the Law. This could been seen in the restriction of movement of people from one country to another.</em>

<em>Failure to follow the legally mapped out process would lead in imprisonment. Others are the banning of hunting of animals under the screen of being endengeared species, issue of preventing retalization towards someone that tried to kill you all in the name of being politically correct etc.</em>

Explanation:

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An individual who comes from a violent family or lives in a culture that condones intimate partner violence experiences ________
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Answer: distal influences

Explanation:

An individual who comes from a violent family or lives in a culture that condones intimate partner violence experiences <u>distal influences</u> on violence.

7 0
2 years ago
Select the correct answer.
VladimirAG [237]

Answer:

A.  The two chambers get together to resolve the issue.

Explanation:

A law cannot be passed without both chambers.

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2 years ago
The question "What was the best idea you ever sold to a supervisor, teacher, peer, or subordinate?" would be used in which type
gavmur [86]

Answer:

Behavioral description interview.

Explanation:

  • The unstructured interview occurs when the interviewer doesn't have a list of answers to do to the interview, or at least it's not fully structured and it goes according to the person's answers and what the interviewer still needs to know.
  • In the behavioral description interview, the interviewer wants to actually know what the interviewed person has done in past situations.
  • In a situational interview, the candidate is asked what would he do in hypothetical escenarios.
  • Compatibility tests are used in early stages of interviewing to see if the candidate profile matches the job for which they are applying.
  • Performance tests put the candidate into a heavy load of pressure to see how he/she would react.

In this question, the actual question "What was the best idea you ever sold to a supervisor, teacher, peer, or subordinate?" is actually <u>asking for information about what the person has done in the past.</u> Therefore, this is an example of a question done in a behavioral description interview.

8 0
2 years ago
During the October Crisis of 1970, given the challenges of the situation, were there any other ways the Canadian government coul
coldgirl [10]

The October Crisis began at 8:15 a.m. on Oct. 5, 1970, at the home of the British trade commissioner in Montreal, James Cross.

Two members of the Libération cell of the Front de libération du Québec knocked at his door, disguised as delivery men. Admitted to the house by a maid, they pulled their guns and kidnapped him.

By the time the crisis ended on Dec. 28, Quebec labour minister Pierre Laporte had also been kidnapped and then murdered, the national government of Pierre Trudeau had invoked the first peacetime use of the War Measures Act - suspending Canadians' civil liberties - and the army had been deployed in Ottawa and throughout Quebec.

Canadians watching their television screens saw every appearance of a country under martial law. Tanks were on the lawns of Parliament. Hundreds of union leaders, artists, scholars, students and other political activists in Quebec were rounded up by police, arrested and detained without charge. The mayor of Vancouver tried to employ the security regulations to clear the city's beaches of hippies.

Forty years later, the legacy of the October Crisis challenges the notion of who we think we are.

The steps taken under the aegis of the War Measures Act - overwhelmingly supported by both French- and English-speaking Canadians - remain a symbol of the country's fragile attachment to civil liberties and human rights, with echoes along the road from anti-terror legislation in the wake of 9/11 and the policing of the streets of Toronto during the G20 summit.

Despite the Charter of Rights and Freedoms being cherished as a symbol of national identity, it is the mantra of Canada's first Constitution of 1867 - "peace, order and good government" - that appears to trump all other mythologies of the country that Canadians want.

"They like peace and they like order," says Ramsay Cook, one of Canada's greatest historians. "I don't think this has ever been a country that had an enormous interest in civil rights."

The imposition of the War Measures Act indelibly stained the stature of Mr. Trudeau as a civil libertarian and advocate of democracy - even though it was done at the request of Quebec's premier Robert Bourassa and Montreal's mayor Jean Drapeau.

Recent scholarship by, among others, historian John English, author of an exhaustive two-volume Trudeau biography, has lent support to the former prime minister's declaration that he acted to deal with an apprehended insurrection. Yet his response of "Just watch me" to a CBC reporter who asked him how far he would go to defeat the FLQ was tied to him for the rest of his life, and ignited a still-ongoing debate over whether the act's application was justified.

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