Answer:
The question is asking about <u><em>you</em></u> and <u><em>your</em></u> life.
Explanation:
Yes, I agree you have to look at your own school.
First, ask yourself: is there bullying in your school? (I can give you an example of my school: there wasn't)
Then ask youself: how can you know that there is? what have you seen? have you seen people crying, being beaten, being forced to do something they didn't want to?
And finally, look into the reasons - i can tell you that my school was so small that we all knew each other's parents, so noone would bully someone while knowing their paretns so close.
In his "Letter from Birmingham Jail," King argues that "injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." The evidence he employs is that of racially discriminatory laws in the South. King argues that the existence of unjust laws such as segregation represent an injustice. And this unjustice is an obstacle for achieving equality and justice everywhere in the country. For example, if white people do not believe in segregation, this nonetheless means that they have to abide by the law, causing injustice. The appeal that he uses is logos, as he encourages us to think of the logic of the arguments put forward by lawmakers.
Answer:
1. left my
2. keep your
3. drove to
4. lock your
5. ride my
6. look both ways
Explanation:
im not too sure about this so id wait for another answer to be sure