I do agree with Chillingworth, it is definitely better not to keep a guilty secret because, in my personal opinion, keeping this kind of secrets is like swallowing a slow acting poison. This guilty secrets, when kept, make us behave in a way that might cause harm to others or to ourselves; in other words, keeping this kind of secrets allows the harmful, hurtful behavior, we are keeping within the secret, to continue.
If you decide to keep this kind of secrets, it immediately creates a barrier between you and the person who told you the secret, and eventually it would also create a barrier with the person that might be hurt by knowing what you have been told. It is actually better and almost a life rule, to live your life without having any secrets to keep at all and, also, to not do anything you can not tell the people you care the most or that later, as time passes by, you will regret.
Answer:
I would prob go with housing
Explanation:
<span> Prohibition proved difficult to enforce and failed to have the intended effect of eliminating crime and other social problems–to the contrary, it led to a rise in organized crime, as the bootlegging of alcohol became an ever-more lucrative operation. In 1933, widespread public disillusionment led Congress to ratify the 21st Amendment, which repealed Prohibition.</span>
<span>balanced growth of all economic sectors.</span>
Answer:
He is referring to the right of U.S Citizens to fulfill their manifest destiny.
Explanation:
Manifest Destiny was the idea that American civilization, and American people, had the divine, moral, ethical, economic, and political right to spread from the Northeast to the West Coast, and occupy the entirety of the North American Continent.
This idea was justified under a belief of American cultural superiority and exceptionalism over other cultures, for example, Native American Culture. This ideology was materialized during the nineteenth century because by the end of this period the United States had occupy the continental land that stretches from the East Coast to the West Coast, and from the Gulf of Mexico and the border with that country, to the Great Lakes and the border with Canada. In other words, by the end of the XIX century, the modern continental U.S. had already formed.