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Kipish [7]
4 years ago
6

In the Hindu religion, about 12 hours after cremation the family men return to collect the ashes. What do Hindus consider to be

the most ideal place to scatter the ashes?
Social Studies
1 answer:
svlad2 [7]4 years ago
6 0

Answer:

In the sea or waters flowing to the sea

Explanation:

According to the Hindu religion, the cremated ashes of the diseased have to be scattered in the sea or in any rivers or waters that flow directly to the sea.

The waters transport the dead person to the next life. The best and most sacred water according to the Hindu religion is the river Ganges. It is personalized in Hinduism as a Goddess and the Hindus believe that if a person's ashes are scattered in that, their next life will be improved.

Many rivers are anointed with water from the Ganges, making them more acceptable for scattering of the ashes.

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Answer:

Ronald Wilson Reagan was a transformational President. His leadership and the symbiotic relationship he forged with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev during their four summit meetings set the stage for a peaceful resolution of the Cold War. As the Soviet Union disappeared into the mists of history, Reagan's partisans asserted that he had "won" the Cold War. Reagan and Gorbachev more prudently declared that the entire world was a winner. Reagan had reason to believe, however, that the West had emerged victorious in the ideological struggle: as he put it, democracy had prevailed in its long "battle of values" with collectivism. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, his staunch ally, wrote that Reagan had "achieved the most difficult of all political tasks: changing attitudes and perceptions about what is possible. From the strong fortress of his convictions, he set out to enlarge freedom the world over at a time when freedom was in retreat—and he succeeded." This is true as far as it goes—the number of democratic nations as well as the reach of free-market ideology expanded on Reagan's watch. But, as Russia's recent autocratic path suggests, the permanence of these advances remains in doubt.

Scholars offer a variety of explanations for why the Cold War ended as it did and for the subsequent collapse of the Soviet Union. Some historians cite the U.S. military buildup under Reagan and the pressures exerted by his pet program, the Strategic Defense Initiative. Others emphasize the increased restiveness of Eastern European nations, particularly Poland, and Soviet overreach in Afghanistan. Still others point to the implosion of the Soviet economy after 75 years of Communist rule. Although historians have reached no consensus on the weight that should be given to these various factors, it is clear that Reagan and his policies contributed to the outcome.

Reagan's economic legacy is mixed. On the one hand, tax reduction and a tightening of interest rates by the Federal Reserve led to a record period of peacetime economic growth. On the other, this growth was accompanied by record growth in the national debt, the federal budget deficit, and the trade deficit. Defenders of Reagan's economic record point out that a big chunk of the deficit was caused by increased military spending, which declined after the Soviet collapse and created the context for balanced budgets during the Clinton years. Even so, the supply-side tax cuts did not produce the increase in revenues that Reagan had predicted. The economist Robert Samuelson has suggested that Reagan's main achievement in the economic arena was his consistent support of the Federal Reserve, which under Reagan's appointee Alan Greenspan, followed monetary policies that kept inflation low. Reagan also succeeded in a principal goal of reducing the marginal income tax rate, which was 70 percent when he took office and 28 percent when he left.

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3 0
3 years ago
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Satiation is a state whereby someone is being full or well satisfied or a feeling of being full and or well satisfied.

Satiation is a point of satisfaction of a need in which it stimulus reduces or ends an organisms reaction or response.

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3 years ago
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