Hello<span> Deangelomontrel,
</span>
<span>Okay so Advanced Composition' and Occasion-Sensitivity Further, people read for
two reasons: entertainment or information. [ A writer who confuses,
bores, or threatens the reader, "has lost that reader, usually for
good." Earlier, Donald Murray's indispensable A Writer Teaches Writing
(1968) focuses firmly on the target-audience. So writers, and now
textbooks, embrace this pragmatism. Do the nation's writing classrooms,
secondary and even collegiate, follow suit? Quite possibly not, which
may suggest that advanced composition may often have a mandate to
emphasize sensitivity to occasion as the keystone skill in real-world
writing which it in fact is. My own foray into freelance writing in
particular?77 articles in five years, but not without initial
stumbles?taught me that real-world writing in general is varied,
difficult, possible, necessary, satisfying. I now feel obligated to
impart some of this perspective to my advanced writing students
especially.
Hope it helps.
Sincerely ComedyShortsGamer
</span>
I believe the answer is kindhearted
1.b.......................... 2.a.................... i think so
Answer:
a. when government destroys people’s rights, they have a right to abolish it.
Explanation:
The second paragraph of the Preamble from the Declaration of Independence says, "That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or abolish it." In this paragraph it explains that if a government created by the people does not allow them to have their basic rights, then it should be abolished and a new one should be instituted that protects the basic rights of its people.