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Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 51 - 60 of 213 matching essays
- 51: Abortion: Abusive Parents
- ... leads to death. One thing's for sure, these children's lives are greatly complexed before they even reach the light of day. Which leads to my position that the rights of the child should be extended to the unborn. A mother should not have the right to use drugs or drink alcohol while she is pregnant, it is unfair for ... who has been born, then goes through the pain of having an abusive parent. If the parents are exposed to the authorities they will go to jail and lose the rights to the child, and with proper counseling and therapy the child will live a normal life. Yet, if the child is unborn, the mother can do whatever she would like ... an unborn child cannot speak and therefore needs someone to speak for it in case of any danger that might come to it. Our unborn children should have the same rights as any living person. In our society we give rights to any living creature, human or not human. Is it right that we give more rights to animals than ...
- 52: Vegetarians
- Vegetarians Author: Hugh Buchanan Growth problems. Animal population problems. Disease. These are all problems caused by being a vegetarian, that is, one who only eats vegetables. There are different degrees of being a vegetarian. To one extreme, is a person who eats nothing associated with animals (no yogurt, ice-cream, or even anything that has come in contact with meat or another animal). The opposite are those who just eat vegan most of the time and will still eat animal bi-products. Then there are others who are in between. Being a vegetarian is not natural. Since the beginning of time, humans have been consuming animals. A vegetarians diet ...
- 53: Totalitarian Society As Showed
- Totaliterainism found in Animal Farm George Orwell¹s story, Animal Farm, is a satire of Soviet Russia. In a more general sense, however, the story traces the rise and fall of any totalitarian regime. All of the animals on Animal Farm somehow contribute to either the creation, destruction, or temporary success of the totalitarian government. The original goal of the Animal Farm society is a socialist society, but it ...
- 54: History Of The Original Teddy
- ... then carry these hobbies into adulthood further impressing the lessons. One toy which pervades the age gamut is the teddy bear. A teddy bear is a stuffed replica of an animal in nature. It stimulates an infant's sense of touch and helps develop a child's mental capacities. Although the accepted "teddy bear age" ranges ages five to eleven, for some, collections run rampant throughout adulthood. This is due to the unrelenting attachment that bonds an owner to his teddy bear. A stuffed animal fulfills the basic needs of most humans thus creating that impassioned attachment. It provides something to touch, and it focuses a person away from the world of self. Attentive and sensitive to its owner's moods, the stuffed animal is a confidante and will never repeat anything told sub rosa. Being a stuffed animal, the teddy bear brings all such benefits. "Teddy Bear" by the nineties connotation is ...
- 55: George Orwell
- ... my work, I see that it is invariably where I lacked political purpose that I wrote lifeless books"("George" Discovering 10). Orwell’s first major critical and popular success was Animal Farm. This novel was intended to depict the inevitable course of all revolutions especially the Soviet Union.("George" Discovering 2+) Animal Farm a modern beast-fable attacking Stalinism("Orwell" Grolier n.pag.). The history of the revolution betrayed in the animal world is based partly on what Orwell had seen of the communist usurpation of power in Spain and partly on what he read of the Russian Revolution(Woodcock 21). ...
- 56: Animal Farm Analysis
- Animal Farm, written by George Orwell, is a masterpiece mocking communism. Animalism, which represents communism, was a revolution that didn’t work. Animalism was supposed to make life better for the ... no rich, but no poor, workers got a better life, and all animals are equal. They had even established laws called the Seven Commandments, which were intended to give basic rights to animals and protect them from oppression. The goals of the government were also established. The goals said that everyone was equal, there would be more food and sleep for ...
- 57: Cloning
- ... differing positions, and opinions. Many of these arguments, can be narrowed down to two different views, or constructs: individualistic and communitarian (an image of collectivism). An individualistic viewpoint "stresses the rights of the individual as a unique being" (class review). A communitarian viewpoint is more concerned with the good for the greatest number, "even if an individual must suffer or sacrifice ... USA TODAY revealed another individualistic argument in favor of cloning. In her article "Pressing a "right" to clone humans," Manning interviews a group of gay activists, who see "breakthroughs in animal cloning technology as a path toward same-sex reproduction." With their argument of genetic determinism, many individuals state that now that the technology is available, its use is inevitable. Randolfe Wicker, a New York businessperson, founded the Clone Rights United Front after reports of the successful cloning. He said "we're fighting for research . . . and we're defending people's reproductive rights." These examples show a very individualistic ...
- 58: Golf and its Environment
- ... those people that say they aren’t. If a golf course were bad for the environment then there would be pollution, noise, destruction of the natural resources, and devastation of animal habitat. A golf course has none of those characteristics. Although a golf course has mowers and carts there are only good things that the golf course can do for the ... uses natural resources and occasionally improves its landscape. A golf course can make an open field of tall grass into a lush, green, tree-lined maze. The idea of destroying animal habitat could be a good argument but most of the time you see more animals come to the course or to the surrounding area because of its peacefulness and beauty. Animal rights activists are still arguing that it is still destroying the habitat of some the native animals. Because of this courses are now putting in protected areas where golfers ...
- 59: Hostile Takeover Of The New Wo
- ... Mississippi, have, one by one, been exterminated in their abortive attempts to stem the western march of civilization……If any tribe remonstrated against the violation of their natural and treaty rights, members of the tribe were inhumanly shot down and the whole treated as mere dogs…It is presumed that humanity dictated the original policy of the removal and concentration of ... balance the use of natural resources, mining, oil and gas exploration scars thousands of acres of Indian lands. (Lewis, 2) Sportsmen and state governments largely debate Indian hunting and fishing rights. Off-reservation hunting and fishing is already limited. These regulations hit Native fishermen in the Northwest particularly hard .In the 1960s; Indian activists staged fish-ins to publicize the situation. Eventually the case was taken to court. In United States v. The State of Washington (1974), Judge George Bolt reaffirmed the rights of Northwest tribes to harvest fish under the provisions of the 1854 Treaty of medicine Creek without interference by the State of Washington. The Boldt Decision restored a measure ...
- 60: John Locke
- ... establishing grounds, theoretically at least, for the constitution of the United States of America. The basis for understanding Locke is that he sees all people as having natural God given rights. As God s creations, this denotes a certain equality, at least in an abstract sense. This religious back drop acts as a the foundation for all of Locke s theories ... impact. Locke was a micro based ideologist. He believed that humans were autonomous individuals who, although lived in a social setting, could not be articulated as a herd or social animal. Locke believed person to stand for,... a thinking, intelligent being, that has reason and reflection, and can consider itself as itself, the same thinking thing in different times and places ... would merely be an overzealous exercision of power. Pointless because as long as there was more for others in the common store, one was not infringing on another s natural rights. Irrelevant because property production or the use of labor was completely individualistic and one should not be able to control another s labor as it is an infringement on ...
Search results 51 - 60 of 213 matching essays
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