Answer:
Spending tax money during difficult economic times.
Explanation:
This was my answer on A.P.E.X
Answer:
The economy is, of course, based on the environment. If the environment is not protected, then in the long run the economy will pay the price.
The question of “balance” is actually a false question. The question really should be, how should we protect the environment so that we can continue to enjoy a good economy?
Explanation:
Answer:a. shows low resistance to extinction; shows high resistance to extinction
Explanation:
According to psychology, extinction occurs when a conditioned response is slowly eliminated or weakned which over time will result to that behavior being extinct. This means a conditioned behavior is completely eliminated
An example is when you whistle to a dog all the time to come and get food and the dog starts to drool all time at the thought of whistling associated with food , if you gradually start to whistle without carrying the food with you the dog will stop salivating or drooling.
In classical conditioning, when a conditioned stimulus is provided without an unconditioned stimulus the conditioned response eventually get extinct.
Jeremy is not resistant towards getting rid of the gambling behaviour because when he start gambling and is no longer getting paid off he immediately stops so when an unconditioned stimulus is taken away , he stops gambling and if this keeps happening gradually his behavior of gambling will be extinct.
Jessica on the other side continues even when the unconditioned stimulus (being paid off )is taken away she still continues to gamble so she is resistance towards stoping her gambling behavior.
Answer:
Freedom to censure.
Explanation:
“Our libraries serve the precious liberties of our nation: freedom of inquiry, freedom of the spoken and the written word, freedom of exchange of ideas. Upon these clear principles, democracy depends for its very life, for they are the greatest sources of knowledge and enlightenment. And knowledge — full unfettered knowledge of its own heritage, of freedom’s enemies, of the whole world of men and ideas — this knowledge is a free people’s surest strength... The libraries of America are and must ever remain the homes of free, inquiring minds. To them, our citizens — of all ages and races, of all creeds and political persuasions — must ever be able to turn with clear confidence that there <em>they </em><em>can freely seek</em> the whole truth, unwarped by fashion and uncompromised by expediency.”