You're our 10,000th customer, so everything you buy today is free! The Cashier shouted excitedly. The boy was confused. He was only there to get 1 thing, but now he could have anything they had in the store. He was delighted that he could literally buy everything in the store.
"what should I get. Cookies, Coke , and Candy, or every Xbox game Known to man?"
Then he looked over and saw an old Women and a little girl. They where trying to buy fruits and vegetables, but they couldn't afford them
"Please I don't get payed for another week, please I'll will pay you back when I get my Paycheck." The old lady wept.
The boy then knew how he should use his new Found fortune.
In the story of “Shooting an Elephant”, when the narrator views the body of the Burmese man who had been creased to death in a crucifix-styled posture, he has an overwhelming attack of conscience. The narrator realizes that just like the Burmese man, the elephant had been crucified, as well, and it does not appease the narrator that his killing the elephant was within legal parameters.The narrator apprehends that the law and conscience are often not well-matched. He is there in an official capability and is hated for it by the Burmese. He equally has hated them for their anger. Yet, when he allows his morality to surface, he understands that he is part of the structure that is there to tyrannize the Burmese. The fact that he holds a position of authority does not essentially make it a moral duty. This is true of his killing the elephant. He did not want to lose face in front of the Burmese, and he was legally justified in killing it, but morally he knows that it was actually morally wrong.
Answer:
In the stem.
Explanation:
this makes the answer more legible and less confusing.