C because cloud is part of nature and they are always moving and growing so it changes, nature is always changing
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Spending some time with them and helping them with a few tasks they need done but they can't. With that they feel so much loved and cared for.
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
The soldiers and the journalists that were writing about it were very close to the action. They wrote about their experiences. Moreover, the Vietnam literature has no “escape hatches” (meaning we don't have comic relief, no moments of romance, and scant emphasis on coming-of-age energy). The primary goal was to make us feel like we were there.
        
                    
             
        
        
        
The phrase idiom is a phrase<span> or a fixed </span>expression<span> that has a figurative, or sometimes literal, </span>meaning.
        
                    
             
        
        
        
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
You did not provide any specif context, text, or further reference.
So we are going to answer this question in general terms.
The factors in creating a global empathic civilization would be democratic institutions that could be overseen by an international organization that truly is independently managed and could have no particular agendas not serving the economic and political interests of any powerful nation. 
Another factor could be that citizens from the rich country could live for a period of time in poor nations so they can learn what is to live in shortage of food, lack of services, insecurity, bad transportation services, so they can be more conscious of what they have, more responsible with the use of resources, stop consumerism, and would really help those nations that are struggling to survive on a daily basis. 
By the way, there is a novel titled "The Empathic Civilization,"  written by American author Jeremy Rifkin in 2010. He is an economist that wrote a fictional book to invite people to reflect on how technological advances had influenced the development of humans in the modern world.  
Maybe, you could be interested in reading it.