Saturday, January 25, 2020

Individualism Essay -- essays papers

Individualism 1) An individualist is considered to be someone with personality and character, someone who is not easily intimidated by social pressure or customs, someone with a personal opinion and a singular view of the world. Because modern society finds it important that people think independently, decide autonomously and take personal initiatives, the concept of individualism has acquired a positive connotation. However, individualism is also linked with the tendency to withdraw from social life and turn in towards oneself. 2) Which drives people to withdraw into a small, enclosed world consisting of their family and a few select friends, leaving the rest of society to its own devices. 3) Courageous individualism refers to the dedication shown by people who have independently chosen for something or someone and work energetically for its sake in spite of opposition from family or society; indifferent individualism refers to people who have either lost all hope in their fellow human beings or are no longer interested in initiatives of a social nature, with the result that they are prepared to withdraw from society at all costs. 4) people who have received less education and who find themselves in a precarious economic situation are more quickly inclined to believe that it is 'everyone for himself' in our society: on this view, politicians pay no attention to the needs of the people, society develops in a chaotic and unpredictable manner, the welfare we once enjoyed belongs definitively to the past, life has little meaning, and there are no longer any people or associations to which one can make an appeal. 5)On the other hand, whoever considers work not only as one's own achievement but also as an opportunity provided by the community, and whoever sees it as one's duty as a citizen to ensure opportunities for fellow citizens by contributing to unemployment benefits, medical care, child care, public libraries, education, etc., will also continue to favor the solidarity model and argue for the fairness of high taxes. 6)No one is better placed to speak about the process of individualism than Robert Bellah. Even before the rise of the debate between liberals and communitarians, Bellah and his colleagues had pointed to the problem by asking whether a society whose members believe that they are responsible only to themselves can see any nee... ...whole above our own concerns. A people who will not sacrifice for the common good cannot expect to have any common good. 16) There are fewer and fewer things that get people out of their houses to deal with other people outside of their work context. There are fewer communities that give them support. 17) Have we become merely a collection of individuals rather then a community? 18) The tendency of people to withdraw into their own small circle of life, leaving at large to itself. 19) Americans don't realize because they value their individuality so much, that the ind. they treasure, their dignity, their autonomy, their sense of the ability to make moral choices to train their children in what's right, depends profoundly on the health and the effective functioning of the institutions that shape them. 20) Individualism in this sense becomes something closer to isolationism, the desire to be entirely self-sufficient as a country and ignore events elsewhere in the world. 21) The answer is to work on making our institutions better. 22) Religion is integral comprehensive vision of ourselves in relation to what we recognize as the basic conditions of our existence.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

The Vampire Diaries: Dark Reunion Chapter Fourteen

â€Å"He's gone round the bend,† Matt said, staring at the empty doorway through which Stefan had disappeared. â€Å"No, he hasn't,† said Meredith. Her voice was rueful and quiet, but there was a kind of helpless laugh in it too. â€Å"Don't you see what he's doing, Matt?† she said when he turned to her. â€Å"Yelling at us, making us hate him to try and chase us away. Being as nasty as possible so we'll stay mad and let him do this alone.† She glanced at the doorway and raised her eyebrows. † ‘Anyone who does follow me, I'll kill' was going a bit overboard, though.† Bonnie giggled suddenly, wildly, in spite of herself. â€Å"I think he borrowed it from Damon. ‘Get this straight, I don't need any of you!' â€Å" † ‘You bunch of stupid humans,' † Matt added. â€Å"But I still don't understand. You just had a premonition, Bonnie, and Stefan doesn't usually discount those. If there's no way to fight and win, what's the point of going?† â€Å"Bonnie didn't say there was no way to fight and win. She said there was no way to fight and survive. Right, Bonnie?† Meredith looked at her. The fit of giggles dissolved away. Startled herself, Bonnie tried to examine the premonition, but she knew no more than the words that had sprung into her mind. No one can fight him and live. â€Å"You mean Stefan thinks-† Slow, thunderous outrage was smoldering in Matt's eyes. â€Å"He thinks he's going to go and stop Klaus even though he gets killed himself? Like some sacrificial lamb?† â€Å"More like Elena,† Meredith said soberly. â€Å"And maybe-so he can be with her.† â€Å"Huh-uh.† Bonnie shook her head. She might not know more about the prophecy, but this she knew. â€Å"He doesn't think that, I'm sure. Elena's special. She is what she is because she died too young; she left so much unfinished in her own life, and-well, she's a special case. But Stefan's been a vampire for five hundred years, and he certainly wouldn't be dying young. There's no guarantee he'd end up with Elena. He might go to another place or-or just go out. And he knows that. I'm sure he knows that. I think he's just keeping his promise to her, to stop Klaus no matter what it costs.† â€Å"To try, at least,† Matt said softly, and it sounded as if he were quoting. â€Å"Even if you know you're going to lose.† He looked up at the girls suddenly. â€Å"I'm going after him.† â€Å"Of course,† said Meredith patiently. Matt hesitated. â€Å"Uh-I don't suppose I could convince you two to stay here?† â€Å"After all that inspiring talk about teamwork? Not a chance.† â€Å"I was afraid of that. So†¦Ã¢â‚¬  They gathered what weapons they could. Matt's pocketknife that Stefan had dropped, the ivory-hilted dagger from Stefan's dresser, a carving knife from the kitchen. Outside, there was no sign of Mrs. Flowers. The sky was pale purple, shading to apricot in the west. Twilight of the solstice eve, Bonnie thought, and hairs on her arms tried to lift. â€Å"Klaus said the old farmhouse in the woods-that must mean the Francher place,† Matt said. â€Å"Where Katherine dumped Stefan in the abandoned well.† â€Å"That makes sense. He's probably been using Katherine's tunnel to get back and forth under the river,† Meredith said. â€Å"Unless Old Ones are so powerful they can cross running water without harming themselves.† That's right, Bonnie remembered, evil things couldn't cross running water, and the more evil you were, the harder it was. â€Å"But we don't know anything about the Originals,† she said aloud. â€Å"No, and that means we've got to be careful,† Matt said. â€Å"I know these woods pretty well, and I know the path Stefan will probably use. I think we should take a different one.† â€Å"So Stefan won't see us and kill us?† â€Å"So Klaus won't see us, or not all of us. So maybe we'll have a chance of getting to Caroline. Somehow or other we've got to get Caroline out of the equation; as long as Klaus can threaten to hurt her he can make Stefan do anything he wants. And it's always best to plan ahead, to get a jump on the enemy. Klaus said meet there after dark; well, we'll be there before dark and maybe we can surprise him.† Bonnie was deeply impressed by this strategy. No wonder he's a quarterback, she was thinking. I would have just rushed in, yelling. Matt picked out an almost invisible path between the oak trees. The undergrowth was especially lush this time of year, with mosses, grasses, flowering plants, and ferns. Bonnie had to trust that Matt knew where he was going, because she certainly didn't. Above, birds were giving one last burst of song before seeking out a roost for the night. It got dimmer. Moths and lacewings fluttered past Bonnie's face. After stumbling through a patch of toadstools covered with feeding slugs, she was intensely grateful that this time she'd worn jeans. At last Matt stopped them. â€Å"We're getting close,† he said, his voice low. â€Å"There's a sort of bluff where we can look down and Klaus might not see us. Be quiet and careful.† Bonnie had never taken so much trouble placing her feet before. Fortunately the leaf litter was wet and not crackly. After a few minutes Matt dropped to his stomach and gestured for them to follow. Bonnie kept telling herself, fiercely, that she didn't mind the centipedes and earthworms her sliding fingers dug up, that she had no feelings one way or another about cobwebs in the face. This was life and death, and she was competent. No dweeb, no baby, but competent. They were gazing down on the Francher homestead-or what was left of it. It had crumbled into the earth long ago, taken back by the forest. Now it was only a foundation, building stones covered with flowering weeds and prickly brambles, and one tall chimney like a lonely monument. â€Å"There she is. Caroline,† Meredith breathed in Bonnie's other ear. Caroline was a dim figure sitting against the chimney. Her pale green dress showed up in the gathering dark, but her auburn hair just looked black. Something white shone across her face, and after a moment Bonnie realized it was a gag. Tape or a bandage. From her strange posture-arms behind her, legs stretched straight out in front-Bonnie also guessed she was tied. Poor Caroline, she thought, forgiving the other girl all the nasty, petty, selfish things she'd ever done, which was a pretty considerable amount when you got down to it. But Bonnie couldn't imagine anything worse than being abducted by a psycho vampire who'd already killed two of your classmates, dragged out here to the woods and bound, and then left to wait, with your life depending on another vampire who had fairly good reason to hate you. After all, Caroline had wanted Stefan in the beginning, and had hated and tried to humiliate Elena for getting him. Stefan Salvatore was the last person who should feel kindly toward Caroline Forbes. â€Å"Look!† said Matt. â€Å"Is that him? Klaus?† Bonnie had seen it too, a ripple of movement on the opposite side of the chimney. As she strained her eyes he appeared, his light tan raincoat flapping ghostlike around his legs. He glanced down at Caroline and she shrank from him, trying to lean away. His laughter sounded so clearly in the quiet air that Bonnie flinched. â€Å"That's him,† she whispered, dropping down behind the screening ferns. â€Å"But where's Stefan? It's almost dark now.† â€Å"Maybe he got smart and decided not to come,† said Matt. â€Å"No such luck,† said Meredith. She was looking through the ferns to the south. Bonnie glanced that way herself and started. Stefan was standing at the edge of the clearing, having materialized there as if out of thin air. Not even Klaus had seen him coming, Bonnie thought. He stood silently, making no attempt to hide himself or the white ash spear he was carrying. There was something in his stance and the way he looked over the scene before him that made Bonnie remember that in the fifteenth century he'd been an aristocrat, a member of the nobility. He said nothing, waiting for Klaus to notice him, refusing to be rushed. When Klaus did turn south he went still, and Bonnie got the feeling he was surprised Stefan had sneaked up on him. But then he laughed and spread his arms. Slowly, Stefan looked Klaus up and down, from the tails of his tattered raincoat to the top of his windblown head. What Stefan said was: â€Å"You asked for me. I'm here. Let the girl go.† â€Å"Did I say that?† Looking genuinely surprised, Klaus pressed two hands to his chest. Then he shook his head, chuckling. â€Å"I don't think so. Let's talk first.† Stefan nodded, as if Klaus had confirmed something bitter he'd been expecting. He took the spear from his shoulder and held it in front of him, handling the unwieldy length of wood deftly, easily. â€Å"I'm listening,† he said. â€Å"Not as dumb as he looks,† Matt murmured from behind the ferns, a note of respect in his voice. â€Å"And he's not as anxious to get killed as I thought,† Matt added. â€Å"He's being careful.† Klaus gestured toward Caroline, the tips of his fingers brushing her auburn hair. â€Å"Why don't you come here so we don't have to shout?† But he didn't threaten to hurt his prisoner, Bonnie noticed. â€Å"I can hear you just fine,† Stefan replied. â€Å"Good,† Matt whispered. â€Å"That's it, Stefan!† Bonnie, though, was studying Caroline. The captive girl was struggling, tossing her head back and forth as if she were frantic or in pain. But Bonnie got a strange feeling about Caroline's movements, especially those violent jerks of the head, as if the girl was straining to reach the sky. The sky†¦ Bonnie's gaze lifted up to it, where full darkness had fallen and a waning moon shone over the trees. That was why she could see that Caroline's hair was auburn now: the moonlight, she thought. Then, with a shock, her eyes dropped to the tree just above Stefan, whose branches were rustling slightly in the absence of any wind. â€Å"Matt?† she whispered, alarmed. Stefan was focused on Klaus, every sense, every muscle, every atom of his Power honed and turned toward the Old One before him. But in that tree directly above him†¦ All thoughts of strategy, of asking Matt what to do, fled from Bonnie's mind. She bolted up from her place of concealment and shouted. â€Å"Stefan! Above you! It's a trap!† Stefan leaped aside, neat as a cat, just as something plunged down on the exact place he'd been standing an instant before. The moon lit the scene perfectly, enough for Bonnie to see the white of Tyler's bared teeth. And to see the white flash of Klaus's eyes as he whirled on her. For one stunned instant she stared at him, and then lightning crackled. From an empty sky. It was only later that Bonnie would realize the strangeness-the fearsomeness-of this. At the time she scarcely noted that the sky was clear and star swept and that the jagged blue bolt that forked down struck the palm of Klaus's upraised hand. The next sight she saw was so terrifying as to black everything else out: Klaus folding his hand over that lightning, gathering it somehow, and throwing it at her. â€Å"Stay here! Right here!† he shouted, and bounded away. Those dreaded words. They catapulted Bonnie right up, and she was running after him before she knew what she was doing. And then the world turned into chaos. Klaus had whirled back on Stefan, who was grappling with Tyler, beating him. Tyler, in his wolf form, was making terrible sounds as Stefan threw him to the ground. Meredith was running toward Caroline, approaching from behind the chimney so Klaus wouldn't spot her. Bonnie saw her reach Caroline and saw the flash of Stefan's silver dagger as Meredith cut the cords around Caroline's wrists. Then Meredith was half carrying, half dragging Caroline behind the chimney to work on her feet. A sound like antlers clashing made Bonnie spin around. Klaus had come at Stefan with a tall branch of his own-it must have been lying flat on the ground before. It looked just as sharp as Stefan's, making it a serviceable lance. But Klaus and Stefan weren't just stabbing at each other; they were using the sticks as quarterstaffs. Robin Hood, Bonnie thought dazedly. Little John and Robin. That was what it looked like: Klaus was that much taller and heavier boned than Stefan. Then Bonnie saw something else and cried out wordlessly. Behind Stefan, Tyler had gotten up again and was crouching, just as he had in the graveyard before lunging for Stefan's throat. Stefan's back was to him. And Bonnie couldn't warn him in time. But she'd forgotten about Matt. Head down, ignoring claws and fangs, he was charging at Tyler, tackling him like a first-rate linebacker before he could leap. Tyler went flying sideways, with Matt on top of him. Bonnie was overwhelmed. So much was happening. Meredith was sawing through Caroline's ankle cords; Matt was pummeling Tyler in a way that certainly would have gotten him disqualified on the football field; Stefan was whirling that white ash staff as if he'd been trained for it. Klaus was laughing deliriously, seeming exhilarated by the exercise, as they traded blows with deadly speed and accuracy. But Matt seemed to be in trouble now. Tyler was gripping him and snarling, trying to get a hold on his throat. Wildly, Bonnie looked around for a weapon, entirely forgetting the carving knife in her pocket. Her eye fell on a dead oak branch. She picked it up and ran to where Tyler and Matt were struggling. Then Matt was on top of Tyler again, holding Tyler's head down, holding himself clear. Bonnie saw her chance and aimed the stick. But Tyler saw her. With a burst of supernatural strength, he gathered his legs and sent Matt soaring off him backward. Matt's head struck a tree with a sound Bonnie would never forget. The dull sound of a rotten melon bursting. He slid down the front of the tree and was still. Bonnie was gasping, stunned. She might have started toward Matt, but Tyler was there in front of her, breathing hard, bloody saliva running down his chin. He looked even more like an animal than he had in the graveyard. As if in a dream, Bonnie raised her stick, but she could feel it shaking in her hands. Matt was so still-was he breathing? Bonnie could hear the sob in her own breath as she faced Tyler. This was ridiculous; this was a boy from her own school. A boy she'd danced with last year at the Junior Prom. How could he be keeping her away from Matt, how could he be trying to hurt them all? How could he be doing this? â€Å"Tyler, please-† she began, meaning to reason with him, to beg him†¦ â€Å"All alone in the woods, little girl?† he said, and his voice was a thick and guttural growl, shaped at the last minute into words. In that instant Bonnie knew that this was not the boy she'd gone to school with. This was an animal. Oh, God, he's ugly, she thought. Ropes of red spit hung out of his mouth. And those yellow eyes with the slitted pupils-in them she saw the cruelty of the shark, and the crocodile, and the wasp that lays its eggs in a caterpillar's living body. All the cruelty of animal nature in those two yellow eyes. â€Å"Somebody should have warned you,† Tyler said, dropping his jaw to laugh the way a dog does. â€Å"Because if you go out in the woods alone, you might meet the Big Bad-â€Å" â€Å"Jerk!† a voice finished for him, and with a feeling of gratitude that bordered on the religious, Bonnie saw Meredith beside her. Meredith, holding Stefan's dagger, which shone liquidly in the moonlight. â€Å"Silver, Tyler,† Meredith said, brandishing it. â€Å"I wonder what silver does to a werewolf's members? Want to see?† All Meredith's elegance, her standoffishness, her cool observer's dispassion were gone. This was the essential Meredith, a warrior Meredith, and although she was smiling, she was mad. â€Å"Yes!† shouted Bonnie gleefully, feeling power rush through her. Suddenly she could move. She and Meredith, together, were strong. Meredith was stalking Tyler from one side, Bonnie held her stick ready on the other. A longing she'd never felt before shot through her, the longing to hit Tyler so hard his head would come flying off. She could feel the strength to do it surging in her arm. And Tyler, with his animal instinct, could sense it, could sense it from both of them, closing in on either side. He recoiled, caught himself, and turned to try and get away from them. They turned too. In a minute they were all three orbiting like a mini solar system: Tyler turning around and around in the middle; Bonnie and Meredith circling him, looking for a chance to attack. â€Å"I did it! Yes. All right! Yes!† Bonnie shouted, flinging the stick away. Triumph erupted from her in a primal shout. â€Å"We did it!† She grabbed the heavy body by the back of the mane and pulled it off Meredith, where it had fallen. â€Å"We-â€Å" Then she broke off, her words freezing in her throat. â€Å"Meredith!† she cried. â€Å"It's all right,† Meredith gasped, her voice tight with pain. And weakness, Bonnie thought, chilled as if doused with ice water. Tyler had clawed her leg to the bone. There were huge, gaping wounds in the thigh of Meredith's jeans and in the white skin that showed clearly through the torn cloth. And to Bonnie's absolute horror, she could see inside the skin too, could see flesh and muscle ripped and red blood pouring out. â€Å"Meredith-† she cried frantically. They had to get Meredith to a doctor. Everyone had to stop now; everyone must understand that. They had an injury here; they needed to get an ambulance, to call 911. â€Å"Meredith,† she gasped, almost weeping. â€Å"Tie it up with something.† Meredith's face was white. Shock. Going into shock. And so much blood; so much blood coming out. Oh, God, thought Bonnie, please help me. She looked for something to tie it up with, but there was nothing. Something dropped on the ground beside her. A length of nylon cord like the cord they'd used to tie up Tyler, with frayed edges. Bonnie looked up. â€Å"Can you use that?† asked Caroline uncertainly, her teeth chattering. She was wearing the green dress, her auburn hair straggling and stuck to her face with sweat and blood. Even as she spoke she swayed, and fell to her knees beside Meredith. â€Å"Are you hurt?† Bonnie gasped. Caroline shook her head, but then she bent forward, racked with nausea, and Bonnie saw the marks in her throat. But there was no time to worry about Caroline now. Meredith was more important. Bonnie tied the cord above Meredith's wounds, her mind running desperately over things she'd learned from her sister Mary. Mary was a nurse. Mary said-a tourniquet couldn't be too tight or left on too long or gangrene set in. But she had to stop the gushing blood. Oh, Meredith. â€Å"Bonnie-help Stefan,† Meredith was gasping, her voice almost a whisper. â€Å"He's going to need it†¦Ã¢â‚¬  She sagged backward, her breathing stertorous, her slitted eyes looking up at the sky. Dazed, she turned to Caroline, who was shivering and retching, sweat beading her face. Useless, Bonnie thought. But she had no other choice. â€Å"Caroline, listen to me,† she said. She picked up the largest piece of the stick she'd used on Tyler and put it into Caroline's hands. â€Å"You stay with Matt and Meredith. Loosen that tourniquet every twenty minutes or so. And if Tyler starts to wake up, if he even twitches, you hit him as hard as you can with this. Understand? Caroline,† she added, â€Å"this is your big chance to prove you're good for something. That you're not useless. All right?† She caught the furtive green eyes and repeated, â€Å"All right?† â€Å"But what are you going to do?† Bonnie looked toward the clearing. â€Å"No, Bonnie.† Caroline's hand grasped her, and Bonnie noted with some part of her mind the broken nails, the rope burns on the wrists. â€Å"Stay here where it's safe. Don't go to them. There's nothing you can do-â€Å" Bonnie shook her off and made for the clearing before she lost her resolve. In her heart, she knew Caroline was right. There was nothing she could do. But something Matt had said before they left was ringing in her mind. To try at least. She had to try. Still, in those next few horrible minutes all she could do was look. So far, Stefan and Klaus had been trading blows with such violence and accuracy that it had been like a beautiful, lethal dance. But it had been an equal, or almost equal, match. Stefan had been holding his own. Now she saw Stefan bearing down with his white ash lance, pressing Klaus to his knees, forcing him backward, farther and farther back, like a limbo dancer seeing how low he could go. And Bonnie could see Klaus's face now, mouth slightly open, staring up at Stefan with what looked like astonishment and fear. Then everything changed. At the very bottom of his descent, when Klaus had bent back as far as he could go, when it seemed that he must be about to collapse or break, something happened. Klaus smiled. And then he started pushing back. Bonnie saw Stefan's muscles knot, saw his arms go rigid, trying to resist. But Klaus, still grinning madly, eyes wide open, just kept coming. He unfolded like some terrible jack-in-the-box, only slowly. Slowly. Inexorably. His grin getting wider until it looked as if it would split his face. Like the Cheshire cat. A cat, thought Bonnie. Now Stefan was the one grunting and straining, teeth clenched, trying to hold Klaus off. But Klaus and his stick bore down, forcing Stefan backward, forcing him to the ground. Grinning all the time. Until Stefan was lying on his back, his own stick pressing into his throat with the weight of Klaus's lance across it. Klaus looked down at him and beamed. â€Å"I'm tired of playing, little boy,† he said, and he straightened and threw his own stick down. â€Å"Now it's dying time.† He took Stefan's staff away from him as easily as if he were taking it from a child. Picked it up with a flick of his wrist and broke it over his knee, showing how strong he was, how strong he had always been. How cruelly he had been playing with Stefan. One of the halves of the white ash stick he tossed over his shoulder across the clearing. The other he jabbed at Stefan. Using not the pointed end but the splintered one, broken into a dozen tiny points. He jabbed down with a force that seemed almost casual, but Stefan screamed. He did it again and again, eliciting a scream each time. Bonnie cried out, soundlessly. She had never heard Stefan scream before. She didn't need to be told what kind of pain must have caused it. She didn't need to be told that white ash might be the only wood deadly to Klaus, but that any wood was deadly to Stefan. That Stefan was, if not dying now, about to die. That Klaus, with his hand now raised, was going to finish it with one more plunging blow. Klaus's face was tilted to the moon in a grin of obscene pleasure, showing that this was what he liked, where he got his thrills. From killing. And Bonnie couldn't move, couldn't even cry. The world swam around her. It had all been a mistake, she wasn't competent; she was a baby after all. She didn't want to see that final thrust, but she couldn't look away. And all this couldn't be happening, but it was. It was. Klaus flourished the splintered stake and with a smile of pure ecstasy started to bring it down. And a spear shot across the clearing and struck him in the middle of the back, landing and quivering like a giant arrow, like half a giant arrow. It made Klaus's arms fling out, dropping the stake; it shocked the ecstatic grin right off his face. He stood, arms extended, for a second, and then turned, the white ash stick in his back wobbling slightly. Bonnie's eyes were too dazzled by waves of gray dots to see, but she heard the voice clearly as it rang out, cold and arrogant and filled with absolute conviction. Just five words, but they changed everything. â€Å"Get away from my brother.†

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Analysis of Martin Luther King Jr. Warrior for Peace by...

FIRST MARKING PERIOD It was during the summer of 1928, when a black man named Joshua stopped for a little bit of gas. He was going to visit a friend to Florida during his vacations, and he was driving all the way from New York. Back then the black people were not allow to any white people place. By that time, racism was very powerful and the white people were the most stronger people in the communities, however, it was only in some states of the United States Of America. In others the racism did not existed, for example according to the book â€Å"Martin Luther King Jr. Warrior For Peace†by â€Å"Tanya Savory† in one of the states that there was no racism was Connecticut. During the winter of 1928, in Montgomery, Alabama, a black†¦show more content†¦Emmett was dragged from his bed, thrown into the back of a truck, and driven to the Tallahatchie River. Emmett was tied around his neck with barbed wire, he was beaten with clubs, kicked, and shot in the head righ t before he was thrown into the deep river. Three days later they found Emmett’s body unrecognizable; his nose was flattened, his tongue was cut out, and one of his eyeballs hung halfway down his face. One evening of the fall in 1958, while Martin Luther King Jr. had been autographing his first book â€Å"Stride Toward Freedom† the book was about the Montgomery bus boycott, a black woman named Izola Curry, pulled out a sharp letter opener and plunged into King’s chest. Dr. King was immediately taken to Harlem Hospital.The woman who stabbed Dr. King had mental problems and she wasn’t capable to understand her actions. The Kings moved to a apartment on the third floor in Chicago. It was just a temporary home for them. Martin Luther King Jr. saw that they were taking advantage of the black population in Chicago also so he created a new movement named â€Å"Chicago Freedom Movement†. The black population in Chicago had more faith in their mayor, Richar d Daley, than King. King, before he followed his family back home, presented a agreement to Mayor Daley. Agreement which the mayor signed before King left and agreement which he also filed away and never made any changes. King spend most

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Matthews Is a Patronymic Surname Meaning Son of Matthew

Matthews is a patronymic surname meaning basically son of Matthew. The given name Matthew, from which it is derived, means gift of Yahweh or gift of God, from the Hebrew personal name  Matityahu.  In Hebrew, the name was also known as Mattathaigh which translates to the gift of Jehovah. Mathis is the German version of the surname while Matthews with a double t is more popular in Wales. Facts About the Surname The name Matthew  was one of Jesuss apostles as well as the  author of the first Gospel in the New Testament.Popular modern-day celebrities with the last name Matthews include Dave Matthews (musician), Cerys Matthews (Welsh singer) and Darren Matthews (professional wrestler).Thousands of settlers, some of which included the family surname Matthews, migrated to North America in order to escape political and religious issues from their homeland.The earliest public record of lands and resource of the late 11th century England is known as the Domesday Book (1086), which includes the first origin of the surname Matthews in the form of Mathiu and Matheus.The surname has origins in English and Greek and has over 10 alternate surname followings. Alternate Surname Spellings MathewMathewsMatthewMathisMatthisMatthiasMatheu (Old French)Mateo (Spanish)Matteo (Italian)Mateus (Portuguese) Genealogy Resources Common Surname Search TipsTips and tricks for researching your Matthews ancestors online.Matthews Family Genealogy ForumThe free message board is focused on descendants of Matthews ancestors around the world.FamilySearch - Matthews GenealogyFind records, queries, and lineage-linked family trees posted for the Matthews surname.Matthews Surname Mailing ListA free mailing list for researchers of the Matthews surname and its variations includes subscription details and searchable archives of past messages.Surname Finder - Matthews Genealogy Family ResourcesFind links to free and commercial resources for the Matthews surname.Cousin Connect - Matthews Genealogy QueriesRead or post genealogy queries for the surname Matthews, and sign up for free notification when new Matthews queries are added.DistantCousin.com - Matthews Genealogy Family HistoryFree databases and genealogy links for the last name Matthews.MyCinnamonToast.com - Matthews Genealogy in All RegionsCentralized search results f or family trees and other genealogy info on the Matthews surname. References: Surname Meanings and Origins Cottle, Basil. Penguin Dictionary of Surnames. Baltimore, MD: Penguin Books, 1967.Dorward, David. Scottish Surnames. Collins Celtic (Pocket edition), 1998.Fucilla, Joseph. Our Italian Surnames. Genealogical Publishing Company, 2003.Hanks, Patrick and Flavia Hodges. A Dictionary of Surnames. Oxford University Press, 1989.Hanks, Patrick. Dictionary of American Family Names. Oxford University Press, 2003.Reaney, P.H. A Dictionary of English Surnames. Oxford University Press, 1997.Smith, Elsdon C. American Surnames. Genealogical Publishing Company, 1997.

Monday, December 23, 2019

The Modern History Of Oil - 1336 Words

The modern history of oil can be traced back to the early nineteenth century in 1849. Abraham Gesner, a prominent Canadian geologist, can be seen as one of the primary founders of Kerosene. Before this invention of kerosene, whale oil was the primary application for illumination in lamps but it was expensive and gave off a strong odor. Kerosene provided a cheaper and cleaner burning alternative. Shortly after his discovery, he founded the Kerosene Gas Light Company and first began by installing streetlights in Canada. Demand grew substantially and lead to Gesner relocating to the United States. Even though Gesner never hit it rich from his discovery, he has been known in history as the Father of the Petroleum Industry. People had begun to†¦show more content†¦Bissel had the crazy idea of drilling for oil. This was seen as irrational at the time, since mining was the standard. Bissel ended up contracting a man named Edwin Drake to investigate oil deposits in Pennsylvania. In August of 1859, Drake strikes oil in Titusville, Pennsylvania. This event goes down as being one of the major moments in the birth of the petroleum industry and is what initiated the oil boom. Titusville and the surrounding areas began to fill with oil refineries and wells. The Titusville population alone increased from 250 to 10,000 in just five years. Ten years after Drake’s discovery, annual domestic output was at 4 million barrels. Oil became the second most valuable export of the United States during this time. Because of this large influx, price per barrel shrunk down to 10 cents. This caused the producers to create the Oil Creek Association, which capped output and enacted floor pricing to $4 a barrel. By 1970, John D. Rockefeller had officially founded the Standard Oil Company. This time period for the oil industry was a topic of hot debate as there were no anti-monopoly laws in place at the time. Standard Oil became the largest oil refiner and Multinational Corpora tion in the world. Rockefeller was aware of the competition in the oil industry and proactively began to purchase many of them. Any company that was purchased and deemed inefficient was shut down. Rockefeller also began secret negotiations with

Sunday, December 15, 2019

Army Essay Free Essays

Accountability is defined as, â€Å"Obligation of an individual, firm, or institution to account for its activities, accept responsibility for them, and to disclose the results in a transparent manner. † The importance of accountability, are being on time and in the right uniform. The main reason we have formations and that we are trying to keep account of personnel to know where everybody is at, at all times. We will write a custom essay sample on Army Essay or any similar topic only for you Order Now You need to know where your soldiers are at all times night and day because in the military things can happen at any time and if you didn’t know where they was you wouldn’t know of their wellbeing or even how to find out if they was alive or dead . The sad thing is people commit suicide all the time and if that happened to one of your soldiers you wouldn’t know, if they was always late you would probably think that they just over slept or just decided they didn’t feel like coming in that morning and it would be a day or two before anybody found out . I have learned in the past years that I have been in that being on time is the most important thing that you need to do. For one the accountability of personnel is major, it plays a big role in the deployment and the readiness of soldiers. I would have to say that I was wrong for not showing up at my appointed place of duty. But in all things that have been done I have seen that accountability is the most important asset here for work. In doing so it makes sure that everybody is on the same page at the same time in order to do that you have to follow orders that were given to you. I may have made mistakes but the army also teaches us that we are a family and if anything stick together and help the other person out if you see that there is something wrong or them not getting up for formations. Well it has been a hard time her e but in all aspect of things I have learned that the account of people is very high because if one person is gone it could mess up and crew or any team that plays a big role into this deployment. I never understood what the role was till my first deployment but you have to always be prepared for the worst in everything that you do. I have to realize that it’s not just me that’s here it’s a whole brigade that makes moves and make things happen. Like I know that I should have been on time and that I should have showed up. So yes I take the fault for that but I still see that in the long run we all have to stick together in order for things to happen in the right way. For me being late I will make sure for now on that I am not late to any place I need to be I will be up way before time. The Army is an institution that is very much like a human body, and the soldiers are the veins in that body. In order for the body to operate at maximum efficiency it needs all its veins to be pumping at full capacity. Accountability is also important for other reasons. Every soldier in the unit, after they complete their day’s work goes to do their personal activities. Some live off- post, some in the barracks, others elsewhere on post. Regardless of where the soldier lives, they are always at risk. These risks could be anything: they could be robbed at a gas station, beat up at a club, their house could catch fire, or they could get into a car accident. The dangers are endless, but that does not change the fact that each soldier is the responsibility of the First Sergeant and Commander in the unit and they are representatives of the Army. This is the reason behind accountability formations in the morning. Every soldier must report that they are safe and ready to continue working without any issues to prevent them from doing their duties. There are other reasons accountability is important such as if a soldier was to receive a red cross message you need to notify the soldier immediately and if you didn’t know where the soldier was this would be an impossible task and the message might never reach the soldier, or if there was a terrorist threat on fort Huachuca and every one needed to be on guard the soldier wouldn’t know and wouldn’t be there and would have major consequences to face when he finally showed up, if he ever shoes up. There are many reasons why accountability is important not only in the military but as a civilian too, for instance in the coal mines everyone has two tags with a number on it and before you go into the mine you hang one of the tags on a bored and keep one with you and when you come out you pick your tag up, they do this so if something would happen such as the mine would collapse they would know how many people are down there and who they are so they can conduct a search and rescue and notify the families of those workers. Not only the coal mines use accountability, every job uses it in one way or another like when you punch in on your time card, most people think this is just to accurately record the time you are working but if you think about it this is a form of accountability, being on time is a very important part of accountability because if you’re not on time you can be considered AWOL or your supervisor could think something bad has happened such as death or you suffered a erious injury. So therefore being accounted for is of utmost importance so that your supervisor doesn’t assume the worst and to let everyone know ha you present and able to perform the days duties. How to cite Army Essay, Essays

Saturday, December 7, 2019

Weaknesses Would Be Use Of Economic Tools â€Myassignmenthelp.Com

Question: Discuss About The Weaknesses Would Be Use Of Economic Tools? Answer: Introducation Organizational behaviour explores human behaviour inside organizations and apply tactics to motivate employees with an intention to improve productivity of the organization. It consists of theories which helps in resolving issues at work place and manage them accordingly. Efficiency of a business defined by its success. Employees play a crucial role in this context. Motivation is the only key to encourage employees to work out the best they can. Various data collection and motivation techniques are applied. Strengths based on the article given has made certain appearances by practically applying various economic tools, methods and techniques. Clearly making it easier for organizations to understand and apply such methods to increase the efficiency. There are theories on motivation in given article, thoroughly explained that gives a clear idea on how to implement them on each level of management to gain the best outcomes and ultimately increase efficiency of such enterprise. Weaknesse s would be the use of economic tools, statistics and techniques in this motivation research are quite intensive and analytical in nature which requires a skilled personnel to perform this research on the other hand, and its time consuming and involves additional costs to hire such qualified personnel. When data is been taken for a particular study it comes with its own limitations it is not necessary those methods and techniques work out for every organization so the results are not as accurate that one can completely rely on. Motivation has been defined as the "willingness to exert effort to achieve the organization's goals, conditioned by this effort's ability to satisfy individual needs" (Robbins Coulter, 1996). The author says that time to time motivation is required to achieve organizational objectives. What I believe is the use of motivation techniques is helpful in todays scenario of changing and developing economic situations. To explore the hidden talents of workers and em ployees at the work place, motivation plays a key role to work out the best for the organization and on the same hand satisfies the needs of the wage earners. The question arises why there is a need to motivate? The clear answer for the same would be its main asset whose performance affects the set standards by every organization. To increase the overall efficiency of the enterprise and to fulfil the long term objective we need to focus on the elements which lead to such goal. Because ultimately employee efforts is going to help the organization to achieve the set goals. However, I completely agree with the statement that efficiency is the key ingredient to success of an organization where employees are the elements involved and based on their performance the organizational objectives can be achieved. To increase the outcomes of lower level management there is a constant need of motivation by top level management (Bozeman Su, 2014). Key points here show agreement with the thesis statement are: It is understood that motivation drives individual to work in a manner which lead to the accomplishments of organizational as well as personal goals. Motivation not only helps employee to improve their work abilities to outperform but also satisfies their personal prerequisites (Elliot, Dweck Yeager, 2017). It indirectly reveals the unseen talents of individuals when they are given proper guidance and standards to follow. Motivation methods and techniques help manager to plan out the basis of what methods and how to apply them accordingly to the type of workforce present at the moment. Increased efficiency assures superiority in products and that results in bigger shares in market. (Miner, 2015). Practical and analytical measures given under article shows that if proper methods are to be applied in management then it will be much more easier for managers to get positive results. If we look at the surveys done in given article it can be understood that there are ways of methods and techniques to be followed to motivate each and every kind of group at the work place. Importance of motivation at workplace is well defined and it directly affects the performance of employees (Robbins Coulter, 1996). In support of the said argument, research is being done to provide evidence for the same. It has been argued that motivation techniques to increase efficiency of workers applied by managers are beneficial for the manager and organization or not. A small shift towards the needs of employees and what can motivate them to work more and in a particular direction could result in better aspects. Its hard to stay focused every time at that particular point one needs to be pushed in a positive manner. (Wong, 2013) Some control by supervisors in lower level of management and taking care of employees keeping in mind their needs that what can work for them and to move them in a particular direction. This proves to be one of the most effective methods of motivation to increase efficiency of wage earners (Queen and Hess, 2017). There are philosophical orientations based on human nature and behaviour about what can be predictable as of their needs and wants at workplace and in what way they can be encouraged to push themselves towards organizational goals. Manager needs to examine the intensity and direction of motivation required which matches up with the employees present at the moment. (Goulionis, 2013) From the understandings of class concepts it is understood that motivation is the way through which performance is attained at the set standards by organizations. Managers should make efforts to find out what can be done to whom to get desired results as each individual is different and so are their needs. There are different ways and methods classified to motivate each individual alike. All these years we have studied is Abrahams Maslow theory of needs based on hierarchy of needs and those five needs namely are: -Physiological: It includes basic necessities. -Safety: Where the need arise for security and emotional harm. -Social: The need for social belongingness arises. -Esteem: It includes two factors (internal and external) which includes self-respect, achievement, status, recognition. Self-actualization: The need where drive for self-fulfilment arises (Healy, 2016). By applying the Maslows theory, manager gets an idea of how to motivate someone by knowing his current needs and focuses on the same. This theory is quite logical and easy to understand and does not require certain skills to perform (Piche?re, Cadiat and Probert, 2015). accounting has a direct impact on employee productivity as they work best of their abilities which results in increased productivity. There are several ways to motivate employee in order to increase their productivity which varies from employee to employee. It consists of few factors and they are explained below: Incentives- A pay is a major influence for employees at work. An effective pay can drive employee to increase productivity and work best of their ability. Incentive comes with a variety of arrangements for example perks, bonuses, paid leave. It is designed to drive employee in a direction as required by manager. Recognition- Employee needs feedback and recognition at a certain point of time by their employers to yield quality work. Acknowledgements made by employers has a direct impact on employee therefore motivates to improve. Self-motivation- Some employees are self-disciplined and self-motivated; all they need is a little attention and recognition by employers. Other factors will not influence them because they take up personal challenges and work productively (Robbins, et. al., 2016). Conclusion as per the studies made in the context is that motivation proves to be most critical variable in increasing productivity of employees and ultimately enterprises efficiency gets increased and leads to bigger shares in the market. The survey shows differentiation of different factors and variables taken from economy to showcase the motivation strategy. The methods and techniques and economic tools make it easier for manager to apply such strategies to get desired results. But it comes with its own disadvantages as per my viewpoint it requires qualified skills to apply such methods. Time consumption and various costs involved in it makes it a more critical strategy to adopt References Armstrong, M., Taylor, S. (2014). Armstrong's handbook of human resource management practice. London [u.a.]: Kogan Page. Bozeman, B., Su, X. (2014). Public Service Motivation Concepts and Theory: A Critique. Public Administration Review, 75(5), 700-710. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/puar.12248. Elliot, A., Dweck, C., Yeager, D. (2017). Handbook of competence and motivation. New York: The Guilford Press. Goulionis, J. (2013). Motivation Techniques Used by the Needs of Universities of Highest Education. Journal of Studies in Education, 3(2). Healy, K. (2016). A Theory of Human Motivation by Abraham H. Maslow - reflection. The British Journal Of Psychiatry, 208(4), 313-313. https://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.bp.115.179622 Miner, J. (2015). Organizational behavior 1 Essential Theories of Motivation and Leadership. New Delhi: Prentice-Hall of India Private. Newbold, P., Carlson, W., Thorne, B. (2013). Statistics for business and economics. Boston: Pearson. Piche?re, P., Cadiat, A. and Probert, C. (2015). Maslow's Hierarchy of needs. [Place of publication not identified]: 50 minutes. Queen, T. and Hess, T. (2017). Linkages Between Resources, Motivation, and Engagement in Everyday Activities. Motivation Science. Robbins, S., Judge, T., Odendaal, A., Roodt, G., Robbins, S. (2016). Organisational behaviour. Cape Town, [South Africa]: Pearson Holdings Southern Africa. Ritz, A., Brewer, G., Neumann, O. (2016). Public Service Motivation: A Systematic Literature Review and Outlook. Public Administration Review, 76(3), 414-426. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/puar.12505 Wong, Z. (2013). Human factors in project management. San Francisco, Calif.: Jossey-Bass.