Answer: it could be to the place, and where it is being taking at.
Explanation: And yea, very hard
• Sample Answer
In the reflective essay, “I Am a Native of North America,” Chief Dan George expresses his views of Native American and white cultures. When talking about his own upbringing, he describes how he grew up living in communal houses where “...people learned to live with one another; learned to serve one another; learned to respect the rights of one another”. To him, this helped create a warm and caring community. He also claims that in his culture, “there was a deep respect for everything in nature that surrounded them”. To support this idea, he recounts an incident with his father. When as a boy Chief Dan George was fishing just for fun, his father stopped him, saying, “You must respect [the fish]. You must not kill them just for the fun of it”. To Chief Dan George’s thinking, a community cannot be healthy unless its members feel a clear connection to the natural world. He clearly thinks his own upbringing had definite benefits that other cultures could look to as a model.
In contrast, Chief Dan George describes what he sees as problems with modern white society. Unlike his own culture, in modern communities, people don’t live communally, but rather separate from each other. He writes, “people in one apartment do not even know the people in the next and care less about them.” He sees this a problem because people in such a living situation don’t learn to take care of each other. Chief Dan George believes this lack of connection causes even further damage, both to the environment and with repeated wars in which millions are killed.
In fact, Chief Dan George even questions whether people in modern society have learned how to love anything: their neighbors, nature, or even their families. He sees love for one another as the solution to this terrible dilemma. He believes that without this love our communities will fail. When trying to bring both Native American and modern white cultures together, he knows this will be difficult. Addressing members of the white cultural community, he states, “You must truly love us, be patient with us and share with us. And we must love you – with a genuine love that forgives and forgets…”. He believes if this mutual love could happen, then a greater brotherhood could be created, a brotherhood that would provide an even more positive community for all.
By summing up (3) hoped it helped
Answer:
{In explanation}
Explanation: {May or not be over 250 word}
The outbreak of corona virus disease 2019 (C/OVID-19) has created a global health crisis that has had a deep impact on the way we perceive our world and our everyday lives. Not only the rate of contagion and patterns of transmission threatens our sense of agency, but the safety measures put in place to contain the spread of the virus also require social distancing by refraining from doing what is inherently human, which is to find solace in the company of others. Within this context of physical threat, social and physical distancing, as well as public alarm, what has been (and can be) the role of the different mass media channels in our lives on individual, social and societal levels?
Mass media have long been recognized as powerful forces shaping how we experience the world and ourselves. This recognition is accompanied by a growing volume of research, that closely follows the footsteps of technological transformations (e.g. radio, movies, television, the internet, mobiles) and the zeitgeist (e.g. cold war, 9/11, climate change) in an attempt to map mass media major impacts on how we perceive ourselves, both as individuals and citizens. Are media (broadcast and digital) still able to convey a sense of unity reaching large audiences, or are messages lost in the noisy crowd of mass self-communication? Do social media provide solace or grounds for misinformation, (d/e)humanization, and discrimination? Can we harness the flexibility and ubiquity of media technologies to increase the public's adherence to the safety measures suggested by global health organizations to combat the spread of C/OVID-19? How can different media industries and channels for mass communication promote adaptive responses to foster positive health attitudes and adherence to preventive measures? How media impact the dynamics in the private domain (e.g. strengthen family bonds versus domestic conflict and violence)?
Within this ample framework of complexity, we welcome research addressing media impact and its role during the C/OVID-19 pandemic, in the following subtopics:
• Effective health communication for the adoption of sustainable preventive measures and curtailing misinformation;
• Public health communication to increase psychological resources and resilience in distinct age groups and socioeconomic conditions;
• Effective strategies for helping individuals in dealing with social and physical distancing;
• Reduction of stigma, prejudice, discrimination, and inequalities.
Does this question have an answer choice? I'd like to help.