Answer:
Surprisingly, no.
Explanation:
As most stories throughout history suggest, standing up for your rights and what you believe in will get you what you want. But this isn't the case. Throughout history, we get stories of countries fighting for independence and the right to govern themselves freely but they don't receive it for hundreds of years and some still don't have the rights they deserve. While eventually, there is a change and situations lighten up for these "freedom fighters", most of the time the amount of bloodshed and horror that occurs before their rights are won.
Answer:
Explanation:
1. Stereotypes change what you think you should be, men stereotypes tell them to be emotionless. Women stereotypes are that they are weak and need a man to take care of them. These stereotypes can change how you want to act.
2. I feel that our identity is mostly fueled by our similarities, you change how you act and what you like to fit in. You do what other people like so you aren't judged. Very few people base their identity on the differences. You want to be similar, because different is strange in the society we live in.
3. Being different can hurt some people. When a person is separate from the world because they moved to a place were the identity they built to fit in isn't the identity that fits anymore, they hurt. They don't have friends and they begin to isolate, because they are scared of what will happen if they open up.
Answer:
the story of the lion and the mouse
Explanation:
The moral of the story is that mercy brings its reward and that there is no being so small that it cannot help.
In the story, a lion(symbolizes the powerful), decides to spare the life of a mouse(symbolizes the ignored or the powerless). And the underlying message of the fable is to value even your smallest friends. because they can help you when you need it the most