Answer:
The term “samurai” describes men in feudal Japan who were most like the men in feudal Europe known as KNIGHTS
Explanation:
Answer:
If a company does both they will be getting more market control leading to monopoly in the market.
Explanation:
In a every business endeavour, the aim of every company is to maximise profits while losses are minimised greatly to the bearest minimium. The only way to achieve this is to apply series of principles leading to dormination of the market (Monopolisation of market).
<em>This could be achieved through buying of other companies stocks when the prices are at the bearest minimium while at the same time selling their own stocks when the prices are at the highest point in the trading platform.</em>
Concerns about the effects of media on consumers and the existence and extent of media bias go back to the 1920s. Reporter and commentator Walter Lippmann noted that citizens have limited personal experience with government and the world and posited that the media, through their stories, place ideas in citizens’ minds. These ideas become part of the citizens’ frame of reference and affect their decisions. Lippmann’s statements led to the hypodermic theory, which argues that information is “shot” into the receiver’s mind and readily accepted.[1]
Yet studies in the 1930s and 1940s found that information was transmitted in two steps, with one person reading the news and then sharing the information with friends. People listened to their friends, but not to those with whom they disagreed. The newspaper’s effect was thus diminished through conversation. This discovery led to the minimal effects theory, which argues the media have little effect on citizens and voters.[2]
By the 1970s, a new idea, the cultivation theory, hypothesized that media develop a person’s view of the world by presenting a perceived reality.[3] What we see on a regular basis is our reality. Media can then set norms for readers and viewers by choosing what is covered or discussed.
In the end, the consensus among observers is that media have some effect, even if the effect is subtle. This raises the question of how the media, even general newscasts, can affect citizens. One of the ways is through framing: the creation of a narrative, or context, for a news story. The news often uses frames to place a story in a context so the reader understands its importance or relevance. Yet, at the same time, framing affects the way the reader or viewer processes the story.
Episodic framing occurs when a story focuses on isolated details or specifics rather than looking broadly at a whole issue. Thematic framing takes a broad look at an issue and skips numbers or details. It looks at how the issue has changed over a long period of time and what has led to it. For example, a large, urban city is dealing with the problem of an increasing homeless population, and the city has suggested ways to improve the situation. If journalists focus on the immediate statistics, report the current percentage of homeless people, interview a few, and look at the city’s current investment in a homeless shelter, the coverage is episodic. If they look at homelessness as a problem increasing everywhere, examine the reasons people become homeless, and discuss the trends in cities’ attempts to solve the problem, the coverage is thematic. Episodic frames may create more sympathy, while a thematic frame may leave the reader or viewer emotionally disconnected and less sympathetic.
It was just normal everyone was doing what they normally did on a daily basis until the by hyjackers came along at 8:50 am
Answer: Jimmy Carter
Explanation:
Jimmy Carter was a one-term governor for the state of Georgia. Many considered him a progressive politician, speaking out publicly against the moral and political wrongs of segregation politics and policies. On January 20, 1976, he would be making another inaugural address, this time as the President of the United States.