Hundreds of cities in throughout China are the fountainhead of the Yangtze River's pollution, and across the last <em>50</em> years, it has been an increase of 73% in pollution volume in the nucleus of the river, through sewage and industrial waste dumping.
Ironically enough, since the Yangtze river was often referred to as “<em>the source of life</em>” in China; due being home to <em>350</em> fish species, and accounting for a significant sum of China’s water resources for rice and fishery production as well as a big part of the nation’s GDP, while being a center of great biological wealth.
Answer:
E - All of the options are correct.
Explanation:
A) The media power actually increases consumerism. We live in a society based on consume; the media directs it in many ways.
B) The powerful use the media or social media to manipulate, to induce ideas into the minds of the people who uses it. They redirect the information to manipulate. For example, Mark Zuckeberg's scandal.
C) The media has loyalty in a group of people depending what ideas they share.
D) Citizens don't always engage in critical examination of the power. They criticise only those who they don't like.
Answer:
Extravagant expenditure loses the essence of the festival and sometimes becomes a show for attention-seeking people.
Explanation:
Often it takes some expenses to make a festival cheerful and this allows us to devote more time with our friends and family. However, the other fact is that one doesn't need money to spend time with loved ones. The lightness of festivals sometimes blinds us that we cannot see the real motive of the festival and look for material pleasures in it. Society is affected because the potential capital which could be used for its upliftment is wasted on a extravagant leisures.
That should be true. An Ethical Dilemma has multiple outcomings depending on the persons choice on how to follow through with the situation, yet every outcome seems to bring certain downsides with it. for example: a train is rushing towards a group of people. Do you pull a lever to change the trains direction and kill only one person ? Neither of the outcomes are ethically acceptable / satisfying.
Answer:
Learn from the experiences of child survivors can encourage government policies to avoid genocide and its atrocious effect on the survivors, especially children.
Explanation:
Inge Auberbacher published "I Am A Star: Child of the Holocaust" as a recollection of her experience in a concentration camp.
Zlata Filipovic wrote "Zlata’s Diary" to describe her experience during the genocide in Sarajevo during the 1990s.
Any study about genocide offers valuable lessons for the present and especially to not allow history from repeating itself.
Particularly, the experiences of child survivors can encourage policies to avoid genocide and its atrocious effect on the survivors, especially children, because they need support to be able to reinsert themselves into society, to understand and help them cope with the trained behaviors they show as a result of their experience, and to help them deal with "survivor's guilt" in a healthy way.