B. to express reverence for the lost soldiers.
Reverence means ‘high esteem’; the speech not only focuses on them and their bravery, but emphasises on the extent of impact that they made, and how brave they were in such conditions.
A person can think however they want. Actions, like many have said, define a person in the end. Someone can advocate for peace with malicious intent, but they will still likely be remembered for advocating peace and not for their impure motivations. If these contradicting images are revealed to the public, that is still an act against that person, and is no longer a thought.
However, this is only from the public's view. When it comes to people, they may as well be the embodiment of their thoughts. Everything is fueled by something. The same person who seeds their own goals under the guise of peace will not think of themselves as one who acts with the intentions of bringing peace. They will be looking to call forth whatever it is that they want, and be aware that what they present to the public is not the truth.
So, both points are arguable. It depends on whether you value the individual or the community. Actions are what are remembered, and thoughts are a person's reason. Even today, this comes into relevancy because people want to know why certain figures in history did what they did. Thoughts make a person human, after all. Without thought, seperation of man and beast would be nigh impossible. Without action, man would have been left behind long ago. Both thought and action are important indeed.
Swift uses irony when he says the person with whom he discussed his plan is very worthy and a true lover of this country
Answer:
assaulted, destroying
Explanation:
According to the excerpt from We’ve Got a Job: The 1963 Children’s March, it is narrated that racists attacked the bus belonging to Freedom Riders and other bystanders, with local reporters not left out of the carnage as their cameras and other equipment were destroyed.
The words from the excerpt best convey the tone are "assaulted" and "destroying"
They are deeply patriotic.