The speech this question is referring to is President Kennedy's Special Message to the Congress on Urgent National Needs, May 25, 1961
Kennedy responds in a very direct and concrete way to those thinking that communism is a positive system:
<em>"Yet their aggression is more often concealed than open. They have fired no missiles; and their troops are seldom seen. They send arms, agitators, aid, technicians and propaganda to every troubled area. But where fighting is required, it is usually done by others--by guerrillas striking at night, by assassins striking alone--assassins who have taken the lives of four thousand civil officers in the last twelve months in Vietnam alone--by subversives and saboteurs and insurrectionists, who in some cases control whole areas inside of independent nations." (kennedy)</em>
President Kennedy presents communism as cowardly, as a hidden and treacherous weapon that strikes from the shadows like thieves, he represents the system as not even being capable of showing and open and overt attack or confrontation.
What the problem about the captuine is blurry
<span>what the writer bases his beliefs or feels to be true based on knowledge of the subject</span>
Answer:
<em>Hamlet is never afraid to express how he feels, but is constrained by doubt and despair. </em>
<em>Hamlet's feigned madness is mirrored by Ophelia's actual descent into insanity.</em>
<em>Horatio is Hamlet's most faithful friend, while Rosencrantz and Gildenstern prove to be treacherous and untrustworthy.</em>
Explanation:
Characterization in literature is used in order to provide information on characters that the author judges important to share. Its role is to facilitate the reader's understanding of the upcoming events and plots as well as the behavior of<em> </em>the<em> </em>character in question.
Characterization can be <em>explicit </em>(it provides information <em>directly</em>, through the words of another character or the narrator for example) and <em>implicit </em>(informing us <em>indirectly</em>, which means we are to conclude from the character's behavior, appearance etc.).