<span> Douglass will work to help others because he is aware of his own good fortune.
Options 2 and 3 are the first to be eliminated. Nothing in the passage suggests that Douglass is a wealthy man who wants his own plantation or that he is powerful. Option 4 is also not a good choice. Even though Douglass speaks frequently of Baltimore, he never calls it a city of promise or talks about encouraging anyone. The first option is the best choice because he speaks about his good fortune. He mentions how he was the only one saved when he says, "first, last, and only choice". He talks about his life being "marked with favors" and his rescue as "somewhat remarkable".
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Answer:
¨Lew, Fred and I found peace of mind by sitting in easy chairs and turning on a gadget the size of a table-model television set. No herbs, no golden rule, no muscle control, no sticking our noses in other people’s troubles to forget our own; no hobbies, Taoism, push-ups or contemplation of a lotus¨
Explanation:
Answer:
Where children live determines their chances of success as adults. That’s the conclusion that Harvard researcher Raj Chetty and colleagues came to after culling more than two decades’ worth of U.S. Census and Internal Revenue Service data.
Researchers found that children’s immediate neighborhood area has significant effects on life outcomes, and those outcomes can differ considerably compared to those experienced by children just streets away.
In fact, their study claims that a child's neighborhood has a greater effect on future income earnings than the neighborhood they end up living in as an adult. ... This data remains relevant for children growing up today, the researchers say, because “neighborhood conditions are relatively stable over time.”