Answer:
Mairs responded by telling them that their depiction was painful to the disabled people, especially when it comes to their<u> self-esteem</u>. This makes the disabled people hopeless in conforming to the society that they belong–thinking that they'll never be good enough when compared to the able-bodied in the advertisements. This makes them <u>invisible to the society.</u>
Explanation:
The local advertiser she asked responded to her that they didn't include disabled people in their advertisements because<u><em> people might get a wrong notion that the advertisement was only for the disabled people.</em></u>
For Mairs, it is important that the able-bodied people should also recognize the disabled people as an important part of the society.
The third excerpt is structured correctly.
Answer:
Are there Western people who wear dress?
Explanation:
That's the only suitable answer as a question for this problem.
<span>When evaluating sources for a compare-and-contrast paragraph, you can tell if a source’s argument is objective if it A. </span><span>appeals to logic and reason rather than emotion.
A source's argument is objective when it is not influenced by personal feelings or opinions. Objective arguments represent only the facts and not opinions.</span>
It causes the reader to think that Cecily is a quick-witted person. Cecily was able to respond quickly with a counter argument, but that doesn’t mean that Cecily dislikes Algernon, that Algernon is funny or that Algernon is confused. (Algernon definitely isn’t confused since he was making a statement of how Cecily was his little cousin...meaning younger.)