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Home/ Groups/ Freeman's AP Language and Composition Class
Kenneth E

Islamic Law, known as "Shariah": primary source of persecution of Christians. - 1 views

  • Applied fully, the Shariah is a code for living that Muslims should adhere to, including prayers, fasting and donations to the poor. Shariah is the totality of religious, political, social, domestic and private life. Shariah is primarily meant for all Muslims, but applies to a certain extent also for people living inside a Muslim society.
    • Kenneth E
       
      Shariah is the main code of conduct that many muslim countries have in place in their theocratic governments.
Kenneth E

Taliban - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Women in particular were targets of the Taliban's restrictions. They were prohibited from working; wearing "stimulating and attractive" clothing; taking a taxi without the presence of a close male relative; washing clothes in streams; and having their measurements taken by tailors.[118]
    • Kenneth E
       
      Taliban restriction on women
Kelcie B

Dangerous Thinspiration - 2 views

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    This is a source that gives examples from people who went through eating disorders because of what they saw as attractive are on TV and on websites
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    Thank you! I like this article, Kelcie Baca.
Tara R

Totalitarian vs. Democratic Governments - 0 views

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    interesting perspective on this issue.
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    interesting indeed
Kenneth E

What is Theocracy - 0 views

  • Alternately, the rulers are guided specifically by their religious beliefs and usually religious advisors, or see themselves as emissaries of their god, who are meant to rule their people.
    • Kenneth E
       
      The leaders were believed to be religious followers of their god, ordeined to lead their people.
Kenneth E

Overview: What is Democracy? - 0 views

    • Kenneth E
       
      DEMOCRACY summed up in whole ideas.
Kenneth E

Theocracy and Democracy:the Government and the Masses. - 0 views

  • Theocracy is a state where the country and its people are ruled by a group of people who are believed to be guided by the almighty. Thus it implies that in a theoretical state the ruling body is chosen on religious basis. Democracy is however a completely different scenario. In a democratic state the governing body is chosen by a system of elections.  
    • Kenneth E
       
      General idea of what Theocracy and Democracy are, and how the rules and social ideas are different.
    • Kenneth E
       
      this.
  • However it is not so difficult to conclude that with the examples of theocratic countries such as Iran, theocracy as compared to democracy is not a very progressive form of government. It tends to curtail basic human rights and can be misleading in the name of religion. It has its advantages as well but they are few and there is no real positive effect.
    • Kenneth E
       
      Both forms of government have it's problems, and ytou truly cannont make a choice on a perfect form of government.
Tara R

Essay on Democratic vs. Dictatorship - 0 views

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    I found this article very helpful because it is objective and presents both sides of the argument. DID YOU NOTICE THAT JAIMIE IS A KITTEN?!? WHAT?
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    meowww. stop being creepy tartartar.
Jaimie M

ISSCR :: Public : Perspective : Ethics of Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research - 0 views

shared by Jaimie M on 14 Feb 11 - Cached
  • does the end justify the means
  • The ancients did not understand embryology, did not imagine that scientists might create and nurture what we now understand as embryos in the laboratory. Nor can we get an answer from laboratory experiments. There is no test for whether an embryo is a person. Instead we are left to our own devices, to our own moral reasoning.
  • Cells in the developed human in some cases possess the attribute of multipotency, which is to say that they may issue in more than one cell type. Cells in the developed human, so far as is known, are not pluripotent.
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  • We immediately encounter the question of what beings we should classify as "persons" for purposes of the duty not to kill persons
  • the official teaching of the Holy See of the Roman Catholic is unequivocal in its opposition to the use of embryos as means. For one who holds that we should treat every embryo as a person for purposes of the duty not to kill, embryo-destructive experiments could gain justification only if it were argued that it is sometimes permissible to kill some persons in order to help other persons, and that is an uphill argument within any moral view.
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    good info and links to other information
Kristi D

Body Image - 1 views

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    Talks about the impact of media, and the effects of low self esteem and body issues - eating disorders, mental health problems, anxiety, depression
Dominic H

We're losing faith in democracy - The Signal - Opinions - 0 views

  • As many predicted and as pre-election polls reflected, America's young people appear to be falling out of love with the Democracy.
    • Dominic H
       
      Suggests that democracy is starting to lose its popularity and that recently, Obama has lost some of the enthusiasm that he inspired into young people. The new generation is less faithful in the system.
Dominic H

Gaining an Empire, Losing Democracy? - 0 views

  • My long experience with human nature - I'm 80 years old now - suggests that it is possible that fascism, not democracy, is the natural state.
    • Dominic H
       
      Author's opinion is that the natural state is fascism meaning that everything, if it goes according to nature, should evolve into fascism.
Jaimie M

American Life League - 1 views

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    This is an outline of the opposing argument--pro life
Jaimie M

Abortion - 0 views

  • About 1.3 million abortions are induced each year in the United States, though the abortion rate has been declining steadily, if only slightly, over the last several decades.
  • Beginning in the 1860s and 1870s, however, the American Medical Association (AMA) launched a campaign under the guidance of a Boston doctor named Horatio Robinson Storer to outlaw abortions except under very specific conditions that were controlled by a doctor.
  • In the 1950s and 1960s, the public's attitude regarding abortions began to noticeably shift, mainly because of the birth of the women's movement. In their struggle against inequality in all aspects of American life, women increasingly advocated that control over their reproductive lives was essential to ultimately achieving true equality, as pregnancy had such long-ranging impacts on both personal and professional lives.
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  • The late 1960s and early 1970s saw numerous states either repeal of modify their abortion laws, making the procedure much more accessible to American women. Abortion rates skyrocketed, and once again, studies estimated that an abortion occurred for every four live births in the United States.
  • Religious groups led the protests, with both the Catholic Church and several Protestant denominations denouncing abortion as immoral and sinful. Many Americans also objected to abortion on nonreligious grounds, arguing that abortion at any stage of a pregnancy was nothing short of murder.
  • Although the Court was generally conservative, it held that a woman's right to end an unwanted pregnancy in the first trimester was protected by the First Amendment's implicit protection to the right to privacy, but that after the first trimester, the state had an interest in protecting the growing fetus on the basis that the fetus was viable, or had the potential to live outside the womb. The decision touched off a hailstorm of controversy in the United States and prompted the formation of two movements: the pro-choice movement (which supports Roe v. Wade and a woman's right to choose to have an abortion) and the pro-life movement (which denounced Roe and decries abortion as murder).
  • In 2003, Congress passed and President George W. Bush signed the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, which makes it a crime for doctors to perform the procedure, which is also known as intact dilation and extraction.
  • Most likely, the majority of Americans fall somewhere in between these two opinions, accepting abortion in some cases but not in others. The pro-life movement is split between those who object to abortions under any circumstances and those who would allow it in the case of rape, incest, or a threat to the mother's life if the pregnancy is carried to full term.
  • The pro-choice movement is similarly split between those who insist on abortion-on-demand at any stage of a pregnancy and those who adhere to the position articulated in Roe, whereby abortion is allowed only up to the point of viability for the fetus.
  • The more absolute pro-choice advocates, on the other hand, deny that the fetus is a person, entitled to the rights and protections of a fully developed human being, until it has been born, as it is dependent on another human life, its mother's, for its existence. Ultimately, the question of when individual human life begins does not lend itself to scientific proof. It is a matter of philosophical or moral belief and is therefore particularly difficult to debate.
  • Pro-choice advocates argue that abortion is preferable to bringing children into the world when the parents either cannot or will not nurture and provide for them. There are already too many children condemned to a life of poverty or abuse, they say. Many pregnant women and their families are either economically or psychologically unable to care for any more children. For them, abortion is the only humane alternative.
  • Furthermore, adoption, not abortion, is the solution for parents who feel themselves unable to support or protect their own children.
  • In recent years, radical activists on the pro-life side have taken to increasingly extreme forms of civil disobedience to stop what they consider the killing of unborn children. Such groups as Operation Rescue have tried several tactics to dissuade women from entering clinics where abortions are performed, ranging from quiet argument to shouting and blocking entranceways. More extreme activists have attempted to intimidate physicians specializing in abortion, harassing them in a variety of ways, both in person and over the telephone.
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    this is from ABC CLIO AND IT IS AWESOME.
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    you are awesome.
Tara R

Democrastic Government - 2 views

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    This article gives good background on democratic governments. Good points for pro/con sides. Jaimie is a kitten!
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    *DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT
Juan T

Gender role blurring: has it reduced or increased occupational risk? | Occupation Matters - 0 views

shared by Juan T on 10 Feb 11 - No Cached
  • Feminism has earned some great social gains for women such as the right to vote[6], sexual liberation and financial independence
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    could be used for conclusion maybe? about how gender roles in society are blurring and the advantages/disadvantages of this
Kristi D

The Unrealistic Portrayal of Women in the Media: Beauty and Body Image - Associated Con... - 0 views

  • Historically, women have been more susceptible to stereotyping and marginalization than men
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    Specifically focuses on the impact of media on the self image of women
Kristi D

Beauty and Body Image in the Media - 0 views

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    Shows exposure to constant media influence, explains "standards" many choose to follow - aging, weight loss, physical appearance
Jayne C

The Media, Body Image and Eating Disorders - 2 views

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    This source is helpful because it states facts and statistics concerning body image and the media
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