|
|
|
|
Animal Cruelty Leads To Human
... just forget to feed him/her, or forget to show them love
unless it is intentional, it get so much worse, though. These people aren’t just forgetting
to feed their pets, or give them attention, they’re kicking and beating them, poisoning and
butchering these poor creatures, and what makes me sick to my stomach, is that some of
these people do it for fun!! I recently ran across a link to a web page that contained a
online petition to put a cat’s killers to justice with maximum sentence. This is the article I
found on this brutal torture of an innocent creature.
***WARNING*** (graphic details)
“On October 10, 1999, a beautiful female cat came willingly to the four bo ...
|
The Effects Of Progressivism In Government
... was more willing to accept progressive
reforms than it had been earlier. After the quick victory in the Spanish-
American War, there was a new feeling of confidence in the nation's future.
Progressivism had many aims.
The general aims of Progressivism were as follows: to extend
political democracy by shifting control of government from the political
bosses and powerful industrialists to the people; to curb the power of big
businessmen, in order to give greater economic opportunities to small
business and labor; and to eliminate the social ills of society through
needed reforms. Although the aims of Progressivism were shared by all
Progressivists, supp ...
|
No Title
... up for diction lessons”(543). Raspberry explains how many children think hard study and hard work are white (543). He tells how scrimping today in the interest of tomorrow’s goals is white”(543). Raspberry uses many of these comparisons in the essay. Raspberry talks about incredible array of habits done by different ethnic groups. He confesses “…black youngsters tend to do better at basketball, for instance, is that they assume they can learn to do it well, and so they practice constantly to prove themselves right (543). Raspberry emphasizes the importance of developing positive ethnic traditions (544). He tells how people suspect Jews have an innate talent for co ...
|
Abortion
... Nathaniel Hawthorne in the mid 1800's. The two sides of both have worthy arguments with solid and effective support for their views.
People who oppose s believe life of the fetus begins right after conception. The chief opponent of is probably the Roman Catholic Church. Many physicians oppose s because it is their job and belief to save lives, not end them. Opponents to believe "if left to run its natural course, (pregnancy) would ultimately result in the birth of a human being" (Scharz). Another argument against is that laws allowing will increase irresponsible pregnancies. This will lead to disrespect for human life and over-use of . Opponents to b ...
|
The Behavior Of Presidents
... broad powers to direct the nation in one direction, or that the president has very limited powers dictated by the Constitution and should act like a chief administrator for the Federal Government. These beliefs were reflected in their behavior while in the White House. Franklin Roosevelt believed that the Federal Government had an obligation and interest in bringing the nation out of the depression. In order to do this he initiated a number of agencies and projects to employ people. In the first "Hundred Days" of Roosevelt's first term he initiated a number of programs which increased the size of the Federal Government and the power of the President. He did all tha ...
|
The Transition Of Power From President To President
... and then returned and
married an Elizabeth Virginia Wallace; living together and opening a
haberdashery in Kansas City. He was then elected as a judge in the Jackson
County Court in 1922 then becoming a senator in 1934. Slightly later he
headed an investigation committee in the Senate war checking waste and
corruption saving large amounts of money even 15 million dollars. Truman
was elected vice president to President Franklin D. Roosevelt during the
hardships in Soviet Russia.
Truman was inaugurated on April 12, 1945 taking on the largest
burden of his life and he quoted to one reporter, “I felt like the moon,
the stars, and all the planets had fallen on me.” ...
|
Medicare In The '96 Elections
... get full coverage or even coverage with a low premium the
rates are outrageous. For this reason many poor, elderly and severely disabled
Americans were unable to receive proper medical treatment. Then, in 1965,
Lyndon B. Johnson proposed one of his Great Society programs, Medicare.
Medicare would allow those who were severely disabled, elderly or poor to
receive quality medical treatment without worrying about the cost . This
government funded program would subsidize the service of physicians, inpatient
hospital care and some limited home care. The money would come from that money
set aside for Social Security. Medicare, along with its sister program,
Medicaid ...
|
Presidential Candidates: Division And Classification
... him in the 96 election. He spouts many unique, interesting
ideas. For example, he realized, "We¹ll never get everybody¹s income up until we
educate everybody." Clinton is full of brilliant revelations like, "Racial
diversity is our great meal ticket to the future if we can figure out how to get
along and how to lift each other up." His bits of intellect might be useful if
he proposed solutions to the obvious problems he presents. Bob Dole, a
republican candidate, has already done some work on welfare reform. He recently
passed a bill which allows the state to create programs that will move people
from welfare to work. His reform plan will effectively lower welfare ...
|
The Hippie Movement That Arose From Vast Political Changes
... of drugs, and rock music; this generalization could have never
been more wrong. The hippie counterculture was more than just a product of drugs
and music, but a result of the change that was sweeping the entire western world.
These changes were brought about by various events in both the fifties and the
sixties, such as: the end of the "Golden Years" of the fifties, the changing
economical state from the fifties to the sixties, the Black Panther Party, women
moving into the work force, the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and
John F. Kennedy Jr., the war in Vietnam, the Kent State protest, and finally the
Woodstock festival.
The electric subcurrent of ...
|
Communications In Observation
... in various other social settings as well. Consider, for example, those individual employed in customer service-related capacities. While in Shoprite, I noticed that female customer service representatives were more apt to offer immediately friendly assistance than were the male attendants whom I observed on another occasion. Males are not as cocky nor as confident in this sort of situation; their eyes tend to dart around the area while the eyes of a woman remain focused upon the eyes of the customer. The man seems to communicate with fewer smiles--apparently they have to get past a certain "ice-breaking" point before they will feel comfortable with a genuine look ...
|
Browse:
« prev
77
78
79
80
81
more »
|
|
|