Various surveys report that about 40-50% of Americans over
age 65 attend religious services occasionally. These people can only attend the
religious services occasionally because they need assistance from their
children or their caregiver. While the other half of their population cannot
anymore go to attend religious services because their body would not anymore
permit to do so.
Most of the movies in which target the male genders, they
are likely to teach the boys that in every fights, they are likely the ones who
is responsible of defeating or fighting off the villain and that they are
likely the ones who will receive the prize in the end.
Answer:
The correct answer to the following question will be Option A.
Explanation:
- A whistleblower is someone who has or reveals secret information about criminal activity during an organization. Individuals could be workers, vendors, contractors, customers, or indeed any person who is suspicious of unethical business practices.
- Individuals start making unauthorized access to a hazardous situation and sometimes embezzlement.
Other given choices are not related to the given scenario. So that Option A seems to the appropriate choice.
Answer: Confederation
Explanation: An association or union of independent states who align or come together voluntarily to achieve a common goal is called a Confederation. Each state of a Confederation is sovereign that is, they exhibit Supreme rule or authority within their state or jurisdiction.
However, member states of a Confederation are guided by a common law binding the states, Confederation also posses an internal government vested with certain authority or power over the member states all in a bid to maintain sanity and attain the purpose of the union.
Women suffer frequent discrimination in their access to, and practice of, both amateur and professional sport – discrimination which is contrary to Council of Europe principles. This discrimination manifests itself in the persistence of stereotyping, the lack of a back-up and support structure for sportswomen and for girls who show potential in their sport, the difficulty of reconciling work/sport and family life, the problem of reintegrating into the world of work, inadequate media coverage of women's sport and the limited nature of private funding.
The Parliamentary Assembly should call on the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe to work out a “European Strategy for Women and Sport” which should, in particular, encourage women and girls to take part in sport from their schooldays onwards and all their lives, promote gender mainstreaming in public policy concerning sport, support women's sport and women's participation in top-level sport, favour women playing a greater part in sport's ruling bodies and encourage better media coverage of women’s sport.
The lack of women on sport's ruling bodies constitutes a particular obstacle to the achievement of equality between women and men in sports activities. Notwithstanding the efforts made by the International Olympic Committee, women's participation in ruling bodies remains marginal in most Council of Europe member states.