Answer and Explanation:
In chapters 1 and 2 of "The Great Gatsby", it is revealed by the narrator, Nick, that his cousin's marriage is rotten. <u>Daisy is unhappy with her brute of a husband Tom - a prejudiced man who has been cheating on her nonstop. It comes as no surprise, then, that Daisy wishes her own daughter to be a "beautiful little fool." Daisy knows the cruel side of marriage and society. She has been judged on her beauty and social status, while her intelligence and wit have not been appreciated. If her daughter is beautiful, she will be appreciated by this vile world. If she is a fool, she won't suffer, for she won't be able to see and understand how cruel the world - and especially men - can be</u>. If Daisy herself were a fool, she would most likely be perfectly content with her marriage. After all, she is rich, she has a husband that is the embodiment of (toxic) masculinity, she has a mansion, and so on. However, because she is not at all a fool, she can't help but be sad. Still, she does not fight the status quo - she accepts it as a bitter reality.
Calpurnia responds to scout and says her people isn't accepting for whites.
Answer:
Heather Rogers noted that if people saw what happened to their waste, perceived the stench that it gave off, and the amount of destruction that was caused in processing it, then they would start asking some difficult questions.
Explanation:
In the book, "Hidden Life of Garbage: Hidden in Plain View", Heather Rogers noted that most of the waste produced in urban cities and environments were being transported to hidden locations in rural places, out of the sight of the producers of these wastes. The reason for this is that when people see certain awful ways that these wastes are discharged, they will ask difficult questions.
For example, the top of the landfill managed by Waste Management Incorporated in the outskirts of Pennsylvania houses a huge amount of refuse that can be seen and that testifies to the excessive waste produced by people.