Two advantages were that yes, it might've been really fun to float around weightless and see how liquids form into a ball. Another could also be that you wouldn't have to push or pull heavy things without gravity.
Although, there are some disadvantages. One is that your bones can become very weak and thin overtime because of weightlessness, your bones and muscles wouldn't have to work so much, so they get weaker. Also, you may get sick, your stomach will hurt and you might get dizzy after a while. This is caused because there's no gravity; humans are only used to gravity which on earth.
Hope this helps!
Dear Club Manager,
I believe your idea of creating a community mural/graffiti wall in order to prevent and eradicate the graffiti problem is a good choice. While I believe friendship is a good theme, I don't think it pertains to this subject very much. Maybe we could get creative with it and base it off a song or work of art that's meaning has to do with the communities relationship. Such song could be "Come Together" by the Beatles or "Strawberry Fields," another classic by the Beatles. The painting could be quite literally a strawberry field with friends laying in it or a image of many different people "coming together."
The wall could be a very colorful painting in order to 1. draw attention to the club and 2. prevent graffiti artists to paint on it considering that their work would not be noticeable. We, as a unified club, could approach the government about this and the message it would spread in hopes of having it be government paid. We could also talk to high donaters in the club and ask if they would like to help.
I hope I provided a few ideas as to how to solve this growing issue, I am excited to see where this project leads,
(y/n)
The correct answer is the statement that reads: “Lincoln argues that the war is a punishment to both the North and South for allowing slavery to exist for so long, reminding the Northerners not to put all the blame on the South”. Near the end of the Civil War, Lincoln delivered his <em>Second Inaugural Address</em> (1865) and he argued that the conflict that was happening (Civil War) was an offence to God and <u>a “divine” punishment for the sin of slavery</u> that both the North and South have tolerated. In his speech, one can spot Lincoln’s argument when he says: “If we shall suppose that American slavery is one of those offenses which, in the providence of God, must needs come, but which, having continued through His appointed time, He now wills to remove, and that He gives to both North and South this terrible war as the woe due to those by whom the offense came, shall we discern therein any departure from those divine attributes which the believers in a living God always ascribe to Him?”.