Its either C or D, depending on what she's trying to defend. If shes trying to prove that video games are beneficial then C, if she's against it then D.
Jane Austen depicts a society which, for all its seeming privileges (pleasant houses, endless hours of leisure), closely monitors behaviour. Her heroines in particular discover in the course of the novel that individual happiness cannot exist separately from our responsibilities to others. Emma Woodhouse’s cruel taunting of Miss Bates during the picnic at Box Hill and Mr Knightley’s swift reproof are a case in point: ‘“How could you be so insolent in your wit to a woman of her character, age, and situation? – Emma, I had not thought it possible.”’ Emma is mortified: ‘The truth of his representation there was no denying. She felt it at her heart.' Austen never suggests that our choices in life include freedom to act indepe
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Explanation:there lived a girl named kana she was raised up in a very responsible family this family was very humble when she was 7 years old when her parents got kidnapped she cried and cried on the third day of her parents kidnapping two strangers came to the house a man and a woman she allowed the strangers she fed this strangers wore them her father's and her mother's clothe she never knew that this were her parents it was on her 8th birthday when she found out that those strangers were her parents she was so happy "it pays to be kind to strangers".
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The correct answer is Option D, "By being presentable and appearing able-bodied, the individuals still had hope they could escape a terrible fate". That was the message that Spiegelman trying to convey in the panel. Generally speaking, Spiegelman sees the Jews as the innocent prey and the Nazis as the cunning predators.