Answer:
If I was a school board member, I would vote to keep the book Nickel and Dimed as part of the curriculum. I think the book provides important insights on the daily struggles of just getting by in America.
Explanation:
There was controversy Bedford, NH over the inclusion of the book Nickled and Dimed by Barbara Ehrenreich as part of the high school curriculum. The book is a first-person account of the struggles the author faced while working various minimum-wage jobs and trying to make ends meet. The parents of one student complained to school officials about the book’s use of offensive dialogue and was eventually banned in 2011 at Bedford High School for being “anti-capitalist” and for a negative portrayal of Christians. Supports of keeping the book as part of the curriculum said it provided a real life view of laborers who struggle and pay a physical and emotional toll but can barely survive economically on the wages they are paid. Ehrenreich talks about all the tools that companies can use to keep laborers submissive and dependent on their jobs. She discusses how wages are not keeping up with inflation and in many cities and towns are kept artificially low to attract investment dollars.
First, is a law that I find interesting. One law is that if a man strikes another man of higher class, they shall be whipped 40 times in public. There are many other
unequal laws that you can find on google. Another is if a commoner (Lower Class Mesopotamian) committed a crime, their hands would be cut off. This didn’t apply to higher classes.
Answer:
It's TRUE
Explanation:
The differences between man and woman are numerous. The first difference that stands out is the physics. Anatomically and biologically the man and the woman are different. However, these differences cannot be restricted only to the physical aspect, but also culturally, educationally and socially. It is urgent to be aware of these differences in order to understand that male and female identities are formed according to sociocultural influences.
On 14 May 1948, the day before the expiration of the British Mandate, David Ben-Gurion, the head of the Jewish Agency, declared "the establishment of a Jewish state in Eretz-Israel, to be known as the State of Israel." The only reference in the text of the Declaration to the borders of the new state is the use