If the story was told by a news reporter then the perspective and answer would be different cause they didn’t go through or experience it themselves.
Answer:
According to researchers from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, plastic production and disposal has resulted in 850 million tons of greenhouse gas in 2019 and could be responsible for up to 2.8 billion tons by 2050. Plastic exposed directly to sunlight (not submerged in water) produces even more of the harmful gases in our atmosphere. All of these gases result in warmer air and create the greenhouse effect.
I think that we need more government regulation because there are people in this world that think global warming is fake or that just don’t care about the world that we live in. These people won't make a change unless they are made to. If it was up to us, the people, to make a change on global warming alone I feel as if the population would be split between the people who care and the ones that don’t. I think we would end up making it worse.
I do think about the plastic I use every day and about much we use as a whole (America) and how harmful that is.. I use a lot of plastic that I don’t even think about like containers to hold my food, Ziploc bags, the handle on my hairbrush, my toothbrush, the credit card I use, and so much more. I would totally do things to decrease my use of plastics. I could bring my own paper or cloth bags to the store. I could use metal cups. I could use metal or paper straws
Aim to keep everything factual and based on reality
Text features
all those things are features of the text
like i pull up a story on the web and it has pictures with captions. those are features
Answer:
Elie and the other Jewish prisoners in the camp practiced their faith in as much as they can, praying before eating, singing songs before sleeping, observing the important festivals, etc.
But as the days of the captivity increase, Elie began to question God's silence and even His existence amidst the suffering of His people.
Explanation:
Elie Wiesel's memoir <em>Night </em>tells the first-hand experience of the Holocaust and its repercussions on the Jewish people during the German's discriminating acts against the race. The book became one of the most important books and evidence or source to study the events of the discrimination of the Jewish people during the Nazis' regime.
The <u>prisoners along with Elie managed to keep their tradition and religion through the small acts of praying before eating, and at times fasting and singing Hasidic melodies</u>. They also <u>observed the New Year celebration</u> and observed the <u>festival of Yom Kippur</u>, despite their already starving condition in the camps.
At first, Elie also had a strong belief in God. He kept his religious faith and practices as much as he can. But the longer he stayed in the camps, the more he saw of the suffering of "God's chosen people". This angered him and he<u> began to question whether there is really a God and if there is, why He would allow his people to suffer such misfortunes and sufferings</u>. Since his own captivity, his belief in God began to decrease and began to <u>question God's silence and existence at the face of His people's suffering</u>.