Answer:
Are you seriously going to waste 5 points on the tag question?
Explanation:
Solve
O' Level Business Studies Question paper
May/June 2016
7115/22
1-4 (All)
Answer:
For the past few years, I’ve traveled the globe talking with male executives about how to close the gender gap. In the wake of the #MeToo movement, men who never considered sexism to be “their” issue were suddenly eager to become male allies, to help solve the problem.
As businesses grapple with the institutional racism built in to so many of our structures, history gives us some clues – and some warnings about what we may get wrong, yet again.
Consider what’s happened in the wake of the #MeToo movement. It’s been almost three years since it became a global rallying cry, sparked by revelations about Harvey Weinstein and others. It broadened attention not just on sexual assault, but on the everyday indignities that women face: being marginalized, overlooked, and underpaid. There were plenty of firings then too, and plenty of talk from executives and politicians. But actual impact? Not so much.
Explanation:
News4today, give us the best point of view for the day.
Everyday we turn on the news and anticipate that you won’t be away.
Though people are who l hate chuck, you I would date.
Your opinions, those are easy to relate.
Chuck, I think me and you together, is my fate.
Answer: The power grabbing of the Axis countries implies that the United States must ramp up its preparations for war.
Explanation:
You included no paragraphs or reference to any passages so I gave the best answer I could based on general historical knowledge.
From the moment Japanese soldiers invaded Manchuria and German soldiers remilitarized the Rhine, the Axis powers of Germany, Japan and Italy began to capture more and more territory until the second World War broke out.
The U.S. all the way on the other side of the Atlantic and the Pacific (Japanese perspective), watched with some alarm especially when the world thought that Britain would fall. As a result, the U.S. began to ramp up preparations for war such that when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor in December 1941, the U.S. were not completely unprepared for war.