The third alternative is correct (C).
There is incorrect information that the Lemming commit collective suicide.
By the necessity of eating, the lemminges move in mass, behind food. In nature, any migration involves some dangers and death is always a threat on the prowl. Lémmingues simply act according to their instinct for survival. One animal follows the other. In the famous case is the precipice, what happens and a herd effect. One individual shifts and falls, and others follow. Talking about suicide would involve a will. Therefore, the mass suicide of lémmingues is false.
Answer:
B. He normalizes his experiences at first but eventually understands that his internment was not an example of democracy at its best.
Explanation:
According to a different source, this question refers to the text "Why I Love a Country that Once Betrayed Me" by George Takei. These are the options that come with this question:
A. He comes to realize that his internment was relatively easy compared to other Japanese Americans.
B. He normalizes his experiences at first but eventually understands that his internment was not an example of democracy at its best.
C. He begins to view his internment as a betrayal by America and loses faith in the ideals he once associated with it.
D. He appreciates the internment camps as a child and isn’t able to understand the injustice of the government’s actions until he is an adult.
This is the statement that best describes how Takei's understanding of the internment developed over time. In this text, Takei tells us that, when he was a child and was going through the experience of internment, he normalized it. He thought of the camp as his home, and thought the activities they engaged in to be normal. However, when he grew older, he realized that the experience was not normal, nor was it desirable or an example of a good democracy. This led him to realize that even a democratic government was fallible.
Answer:
Honesty
Explanation:
Confucianism is highly valued in asian countries especially chinese societies where obedience and loyalty are highly valued. Both of these traits tend to arise out of honesty thus confucianism is based on honesty
Answer: (4) WEST
Moving to the West in the US altered traditional expectations of women's roles in a number of ways. This expanded women's rights and led to Western states taking the lead in women's suffrage.
Some examples of women's expanding role in the West:
- On the western frontier, women performed many of the same tasks as men in settling the land. There was so much work to be done to establish a homestead, farm the land, etc, that women needed to assist in the physical labor.
- Women were allowed to attend colleges because of the need to train teachers. As an example, what we know today as San Jose State University was first established as a "normal school" (teacher training college), in 1857. It had its first graduating class in 1862, and all 54 of those graduates were women. UCLA -- the University of California, Los Angeles, was also originally a "normal school" (teacher training college), established as a branch off the San Jose school. Many women were becoming much involved in the education field in the West.
- Women also became doctors, lawyers, business owners, etc, in the West more readily than back East, because of the need for professionals in the Western territories.
- Women were allowed to hold property in their own names in the West, and encouraged to do so as a way of increasing the land holdings of a family.
Because of women's expanding roles in the West, they also became much more involved politically in the newly established Western states -- and full voting rights came first to women in Western states. In 1890, Wyoming became a state--and the first state in the US that allowed women to vote. The next states to grant women the right to vote were also all Western states: Colorado in 1893), Utah and Idaho in 1896, Washington in 1910), California in 1911), and Oregon, Kansas, and Arizona in 1912.