In the first question, as millennials, it is ideal if you create a blog, where students can interact to your opinion and can voice out their feedback also.
For the second, don't go after the controversial issue, much more when you are writing it over the internet, you will be feasted with ants and rats. Just go with your personal thoughts and research about it so people won't see you as an attention-catcher only. If your research is reliable, they will respect you for that. Everyone has its own freedom of speech and it is in the code of professional ethics. Voice your own opinion and be realistic, someone whom others could believe in.
Third, just start with the persons whom you are closer too. Hear their opinions and discuss it with them. Listen and accept their feedbacks, and if they say that you should spread it publicly then you should.
Last, don't argue with a particular view point. Some will hate you with that as they think that you are stomping on their ideals, you will be the talk of the people. Just go with your own opinion. Accept different answers, respect them and judge each replies if it is accurate or not.
Your opinion must be heard. Herald it.
Hope that answers your question.
One of the first hints we can find about gods in Nectar in a Sieve is found in Chapter 3, when Rukmani talks about the difficulties her and her partner, Nathan, have to conceive a child. In her visit to her mother, who is a very spiritual person, Rukmani criticizes the god's willingness to help human beings:
"My mother, whenever I paid her a visit, would make me accompany her to a temple, and together we would pray and pray before the deity, imploring for help until we were giddy. But the Gods have other things to do; they cannot attend to the pleas of every suppliant who dares to raise his cares to heaven. And so the years rolled by and still we had only one child, and that a daughter."
Another example of Rukmani's reference to gods, is found in her description of her youngest son's health condition, as well as her struggling to help him. This can be found in Chapter 16:
"I gazed at the small tired face, soothed by sleep as it had not been for many nights, and even as I puzzled about the change, profound gratitude flooded through me, and it seemed to me that the Gods were not remote, not unheedful, since they had heard his cries and stilled them as if by a miracle."
The right of personal privacy includes the abortion decision but, this right is not unqualified and must be considered against important state interest regulations.
Answer: This book helps me realize that much of my online information is not secure.
Explanation:
Lucy's lines best shows that she has made a personal connection to the reading is "This book helps me realize that much of my online information is not secure".
Lucy explained that only a small fraction of the information flowing around the world is securely encrypted. While the other options are generalized and addresses everyone, the book helping her realize that much of my online information is not secure shows a personal connection.