Every community has different concerns. With this in mind, here is a list of possible topics you could address:
1) Littering/trash in public places
2) Funding for education
3) Safety issues (need for more police, better street lights, potholes on roads, etc).
Here are some ways you can effectively communicate with government officials:
1) Send a letter to their office.
2) Try to set up an interview with the person to express your concern.
3) Call your representative to voice your concern with their office.
You could use statistics, news stories, or pictures of the problem in order to convince people to join your cause. Creating a petition, organizing a rally, or protesting peacefully are all ways you can help invoke change.
<span>1. Są one bardziej przyjazne dla środowiska 2. Mają różne harmonogramy 3. mają więcej wolnego czasu niż inne 4.they szkoły mają wiele klubów i 5.</span><span>mają lepsze luches. nadzieję, że to pomogło, to prawdopodobnie nie zrobił, przepraszam</span>
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
You forgot to include the question. Here we just have some sentences but no question at all.
However, trying to help, we can comment on the following.
A political system has different levels of government. In some democratic countries, it is called a Federation. This Federation is comprised of different states and provinces with the faculty of self-governing under a set of central laws or a constitution. As a political entity, the federation has branches that direct the order and legislation of states, provinces, municipalities, and local governments.
In the case of the United States, the federal government was created by the founding fathers as a division of powers under the system of checks and balances, in which each of the three branches of the federal government has no power over the other two.
Newspaper did not write about the holocaust because they feared Nazi government who caused the holocaust.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The Holocaust, otherwise called the Shoah, was the World War II massacre of the European Jews. Somewhere in the range of 1941 and 1945, across German-involved Europe, Nazi Germany and its colleagues methodically killed exactly 6,000,000 Jews, around 66% of Europe's Jewish populace.
This was a destruction caused on a large and mass scale caused by the Nazi government and fearing that the newspaper and the media did not want to cover it.