Answer:
Free rider
Explanation:
The options for this question are missing. The options are:
Excludable
Free rider
Tax evader
Nonexcludable
In sociology, a free rider refers to someone who gets an advantage (usually economic) but that doesn't pay or earn for it. It also refers when<u> people get benefits from goods but they don't pay for them themselves but at the end they get benefits from them. </u>
In other words, others pay for public goods but they benefit from them for their own purposes. Therefore, An individual who wants others to pay for public goods, but plans to use those goods for their own purposes, is often referred to as a free rider.
Answer: False.
Explanation:
Trying to be all things to all people leads to LOWEST-common-denominator positioning, which is usually ineffective.
A successful business would rather be specific things to specific people, acknowledging that to be the right choice for a customer means to be the wrong one for another. The desire to make something attractive to everyone means making it not perfect for anyone: the lowest common denominator.
Summerian writing is very important in the history of the world, as it it possibly the first writing system ever: Cuneiform. Cuneiform was composed of lines with triangles at the end, which was influenced by the medium of their writing: a clay tablet.
The summerian irrigation was also a first (or one of the first). The system was based on digging a hole in a river's bank and then filling it in when needed.
The main difference is that under communism, most property and economic resources are owned and controlled by the state (rather than individual citizens); by contrast, under socialism, all citizens share equally in all economic resources as allocated by a democratically-elected government.Mar 21, 2019
The correct answer is B.
The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan has historically been home for many people and has seen many wars and power changes. In 1978, it became a socialist state and a protectorate of the Soviet Union. This evoked the Afghan-Soviet war in the 1980s.
By 1996, most of Afghanistan was captured by the Islamic fundamentalist group<em> called the Taliban</em> who ruled most of the country as a totalitarian regime for over five years. The Taliban were forcibly removed by the NATO-led coalition and a new democratic government was formed.
The Taliban enforced the stick interpretation of Sharia, the Islamic law. This has resulted in many in the brutal treatment of many Afghans, mainly women. The Taliban murdered and committed many crimes against civilians, contributed to the death of starvation of many children and completely destroyed large areas of fertile land by burning it. They destroyed cities, cultural cites, hospitals and schools. Their policy left Afghanistan in a state of complete devastation and ruin, a country with almost no civil rights, no industry and wide-spread poverty.