If a person survives the Holocaust, the last thing he wants to hear is a comment made by someone who knows nothing about it. He knows what a hideous event it was. He has the experience. It is not A
B: Fear of Flames was based on experience. B is not the answer.
D: Ask any asthmatic what they think of smokers. All agree that allowing smoke nearby is not a good idea. D is based on experience and is not a choice.
The answer is C. I think that is what you are intended to answer. But it is not a good answer. The child may have experience with something that was unpleasant and green.
Choose C anyway.
Answer:Saul, Hebrew Shaʾul, (flourished 11th century bc, Israel), first king of Israel (c. 1021–1000 bc). According to the biblical account found mainly in I Samuel, Saul was chosen king both by the judge Samuel and by public acclamation.
Explanation:
I that it comes from the fact that America was supposed to
be the country where all men are free and equal but when it comes to Blacks,
that does not apply. Despite fighting a
war that restored the Union and freed the slaves, Blacks still did not enjoy
the same rights as white men hence the contradiction.
They did not have any support from ppl in the North
Southern Demo. Were hostile toward blacks
A HUNDRED years ago it was perhaps already possible to discern the rising powers whose interaction and competition would shape the 20th century. The sun that shone on the British empire had passed midday. Vigorous new forces were flexing their muscles on the global stage, notably America, Japan and Germany. Their emergence brought undreamed-of prosperity; but also carnage on a scale hitherto unimaginable.
Now digest the main historical event of this week: China has officially become the world's second-biggest economy, overtaking Japan. In the West this has prompted concerns about China overtaking the United States sooner than previously thought. But stand back a little farther, apply a more Asian perspective, and China's longer-term contest is with that other recovering economic behemoth: India. These two Asian giants, which until 1800 used to make up half the world economy, are not, like Japan and Germany, mere nation states. In terms of size and population, each is a continent—and for all the glittering growth rates, a poor one.