Franklin D Roosevelt or (FDR) was the 32nd President of the United States from 1933-1945. In his infamous speech on the day of the bombing of Pearl Harbor by Japanese forces, he accused the Japanese government of giving the illusion that peace talks were underway when actually the decided to bomb Pearl Harbor without any prior warning.
Answer: hi, I had to read this book as well. The story is told from the point of view of the common animals of Animal Farm, though it refers to them in the third person plural as “they.” 2. For the most part, the tone of the novel is objective, stating external facts and rarely digressing into philosophical meditations. The mixture of this tone with the outrageous trajectory of the plot, however, steeps the story in an ever-mounting irony. 3. There is no clear central character in the novel, but Napoleon, the dictatorial pig, is the figure who drives and ties together most of the action. 4. There are a number of conflicts in Animal Farm—the animals versus Mr. Jones, Snowball versus Napoleon, the common animals versus the pigs, Animal Farm versus the neighboring humans—but all of them are expressions of the underlying tension between the exploited and exploiting classes and between the lofty ideals and harsh realities of socialism. 5.
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Trees are helpful. They help us breath. Trees take carbon dioxide and make it into life breathing oxygen for other animals and humans. They give us their body and soul. We take wood from trees and make it into so many different and wonderful things. All thanks to trees we have lumber for houses and pulp for paper. Trees beautify our living spaces. Cities need trees for their greenery to shine through the concrete jungle. They provide a sense of hope, that cold stone and brick can be broken by the enduring spirit of trees. Just a small tree grows into mighty Oaks, Baobabs and Redwoods. Trees are our helpful friends. We better make sure that we take care of them.