In the last decade, social networking’s has been increased so quickly in our society. There are a lot of popular websites have got a lot of attention like Snapchat, Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter. Because of these sites people have changed their attitudes in real life. Teenagers spent a lot of hours daily by chatting, sharing, playing and posting their own photos online. Although social networking made people to be in a better connecting, but that can have harmful side like cyber-bullying more than helpful side. First of all, it’s not an illusion, but social networking allowed people to have hundreds or even thousands of friends, without even knowing their names or see their faces. In fact, Face-to-face required in relationships to keep friendships stronger. In “You Gotta have Friends," Robin Dunber has explain how social networking has solved the way that we can be in contact with the others. Dunber explained, “Instant messaging and social networking claim to solve that problem by allowing us to talk to as many people as we like”, all at the same time. Honestly, that can harm our relationships because we are not giving all our attention to our real friends. For example, when your best friend have something important to say, and he recognized that you don’t have time for him because you’re busy with your other friends online. He will not going to talk to you anymore because you don’t care at all about him. Social networking can be very helpful in many cases, but if misused it can have very serious effects on our relationships. <span>Secondly, social networking has changed how we communicate with our community. During the last decade, we can definitely agree that social networking let us speak less with our family or our community. Today, our fingers talk more than our mouths, by social media like Twitter and Facebook, and that will lead us to be a uncooperative community. While I watched “Connected, but alone?”</span>
In general, American literature can be thought of as somewhat of a
"mirror" when it comes to the American identity and culture. It shines a
light on the American identity.
<span>The correct answer is the third option: if allowed to continue, tax evasion was a serious offense. Tax evasion means not paying your taxes, which, during Thoreau's time, resulted in going to jail. This punishment reflects the idea that tax evasion is a serious offense and that offenders should be treated as criminals. Despite these consequences, Thoreau used tax evasion as a form of civil disobedience. For example, he refused to pay his poll tax during the Mexican War as a way to protest the slavery that was still occurring in the United States. Due to his tax evasion, he went to jail until the poll tax was paid.</span>