<u>Identity Theft</u> occurs when criminals obtain personal information that allows them to impersonate someone else in order to use the person's credit to obtain financial accounts and make purchases.
<u>Explanation</u>:
Theft is an action of committing crime. Theft is also defined as taking someone’s property or things without their permission or knowledge.
<u>Identity theft</u> means stealing someone’s identity and using them to gain financial advantage. Identity theft can happen in many ways. Some of them are committing theft on financial identity, medical identity, insurance identity, driver’s license and social security identity. Identity theft can be reported to federal trade commission.
The purpose of any program is to provide its listeners with good information regarding some topic which has relevance to the listener. Whether this is something political or something scientific totally depends on the programs we're talking about. It also depends on the format in which it will be told.
I disagree because we all know that the earth isn't flat and way back when when this happend they didn't had all of the tecnolgy that we have today so then how did he think that the earth was flat even though after the one persons presentation of the earth that he was still questioning the person that was giving the presentation.
Adolescent egocentrism is a term that David Elkind used to describe the phenomenon of adolescents' inability to distinguish between their perception of what others think about them and what people actually think in reality.[1] David Elkind's theory on adolescent egocentrism is drawn from Piaget's theory on cognitive developmental stages, which argues that formal operations enable adolescents to construct imaginary situations and abstract thinking.[2]
Accordingly, adolescents are able to conceptualize their own thoughts and conceive of other people's thoughts.[1] However, Elkind pointed out that adolescents tend to focus mostly on their own perceptions – especially on their behaviors and appearance – because of the "physiological metamorphosis" they experience during this period. This leads to adolescents' belief that other people are as attentive to their behaviors and appearance as they are of themselves.[1] According to Elkind, adolescent egocentrism results in two consequential mental constructions, namely imaginary audience and personal fable.