Is this from a book, if so what book because I can not help you without getting all the information.
<span>Well, one obvious issue is the fear that advancing technology and rapid industrialization -- a prominent feature of the Victorian Era -- would corrupt humanity, and lead people to do monstrous things. This is also a theme struck in "Frankenstein" and several of Jules Verne's stories, and you can see its modern echo in the fretting people do over video games and the Internet.</span>
Answer:Building on the earlier Page Act of 1875 which banned Chinese women from immigrating to the United States, the Chinese Exclusion Act was the first, and remains the only law to have been implemented, to prevent all members of a specific ethnic or national group from immigrating to the United States.
Explanation:
It should be "Each person, regardless of age <span>or background, has the right to krump." This fixes the subject verb issues and makes for better sentence flow. </span>
Answer:
The three reasons Schlosser uses to support his claim that the fast-food industry resembles the manufacturing business are:
Both industries promote “throughput.”
Both industries stress consistency and standardization.
Workers are interchangeable.
Explanation:
The reasons behind these arguments are: first, they run assembly lines that require the distribution of the processes to achieve the fulfillment of tasks. Second, standardization is key in these types of businesses as they have to create the processes as easily as they can so everyone can perform them. Third, workers are interchangeable because they run bored very often and because the tasks are standardized so they can be done by anyone.