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How To Finish My Essay On Occupy Wall Street

What are your interests?

Every next moment of life is interesting. Filled with mystery.well here are a list of things I can go with:I have a "LIFE" and I'm living. (: Food. :P What's better than filling a hungry stomach. (food is happiness)Movies. The whole concept of movies is to make the 'impossible' to 'possible' ;) There are so many good movies to watch and be inspired! Passion : be it work or play. Possibly anything(good) that makes me happy.Exploring - We are human beings and its only one life, and a very big world. Explore places, meet new people. Because there is so much to learn and know.Music, Writing, Capturing the beauty in simple things.Writing letters to self and reading them after years. ;)Desire to achieve goals in life. Be it small or big, having goals will always make life interesting.Being a better person then who I am today. And How to be a better person: Being happy and spreading love <3 :)Life is always interesting, Living in the present with the anticipation of future mixed with few lessons from the past.

Occupy Wall Street essay?

How about these to chew on:

What is the protesting about?

What do you think the protesters hope to accomplish and what do they want?

What do they REALLY want? Forget the crime and all that.

Is their protest Constitutionally protected, and to what extent?

How has the protest changed over the last few months, like have the demands or wants changed?

What has happened to the protesters who have been arrested and why do you think this is wrong or bad.

Should other countries protest on the streets like the people of France do?

In the August 21, 2017 issue of “The New Yorker” magazine, Nathan Heller wrote a long, boring essay titled “ Is There Any Point to Protesting?”His summary is: “We turn out in the streets and nothing seems to happen. Maybe we’re doing it wrong.”Actually, after reading his essay, I don’t see an indication one way or the other. Most of the street-protests peter out to nothing. The only way they seem memorable is by photographers grouping protesters to make it appear that there are lots of them. The Civil Rights marches were carefully coordinated and planned to achieve results, but even they were piece-meal. Here in Los Angeles, the LA teachers just finished their strike. They picketed, they marched, they massed at city hall. The superintendent of the school district appears to have finally given them what they want. It is unclear if the district actually had the money that the teachers wanted. Oh, yes, the teachers’ union said it was “for the children.” (It ALWAYS says that.) As of now, some soothsayers are predicting that the district will run out of money, the state will take over, the Board of Education will be removed from office, the district broken up and many administrators and teachers will be out of jobs.Be careful about what you wish for; you may get it.So, while the passion exhibited makes great press, it is unclear that any good comes out of it. Except for horny boys.Horny boys? Yes. I’ll explain. When you have these passionate young chicks turning out for demonstrations, it is a great place to pretend sympathy for their cause, pick them up, bed them while they are still hot and bothered, then go on to the next.I’ll bet that happened in France, too.

What's wrong with "Occupy Wall Street"?

For a sympathetic critique from inside the movement, see Lisa Longo's essay How Occupy Broke My Heart.  I am less inclined to sympathy than Ms. Longo.  I think it was self-evident from the start that the Occupy movement:was more focused on re-ordering others' lives than on finding new ways to live its ownmaking it intrinsically vulnerable to those seeking powerwas unable to focus on differentiating the rightful role of governmentmaking it intrinsically unable to police its own membersstrongly believed that purity of intentions would make such policing unnecessarywhich is true for the Tea Partiers, who didn't trash the neighborhoods they visitedbut made Occupy defenseless against internal parasitesgenerally indulged in magical thinkingWants More Government

What would you do if you started developing a crush on a support worker?

hang about ppl i have given this great thought i dont have much else to do...i would never put this persons career into risk over what i am thinking or perhaps feeling...although this person and i get along quite well we already have the option of going out for coffee ect.....I just want suggetions on what my best approach would be...to not have this person as a worker or to go with it.....this person has been very kind to me to the extent of going out of this persons way to help me....am i taking his being professional too far in my head or not???i dont ask many questions on here myself but i can see that i have a 50/50%answer rate as to what i should do which makes it really hard because i have no one to talk to and i dont know what the hell to do..sorry about the big long story but some seem to have got the wrong idea and i want to make my question as clear as possible.thank you ppl again i apologize for the extent of my question

I am preparing for competitive exams, but for the past few days I have not been able to concentrate on studying and when I force myself I feel exhausted. When I start studying my mind wanders a lot. I'm in a 'do or die' situation as I have to clear those exams, but I am wasting my precious time. What should I do?

Thank you for this detail question description.The same things occur with every aspirants.They all do the same for fighting it off.But, what actually makes a difference is their unstoppable efforts to work onto the same.Fear, anxiety and pressure like things are very common in the struggle of clearing any competitive examination. Around millions are giving and thousands will be selected. Tough.Nothing except for going along and studying is the way to fight this.If you ask Google it has techniques like meditation and etc. If you start meditating with such kind of chaos in your mind then, you'll feel more low as you will depend upon meditation. Proper mediation gives result in and after 3–4 months of practice and till that time you don't have so much patience. Accept it. So it cannot help.As I said earlier, walking through the same. Studying is the way only.Hormones may play with you sometimes. Let it. But do remember when the game ends, you should be the winner.Don't feel low and stressful.Believe in your efforts, the results will walk to you as it is meant to be.Few things I personally practice to get rid of such things is:Yoga. Preferably, kapalbhati pranayama for 10 minutes daily. You can see the effects of the same on the internet.Weekly dopamine, serotonin and endomorphin doses. In my case I like to eat, so I prefer eating tasty and healthy food every week to keep myself happy.Build up the habit of patience. Slowly everything fades off and I'm again back on track.Discuss the issues with one close friend and with family. I said discuss, don't expect solutions. It will help.Finally, be passionate and keep reminding yourself, your 'why' for this journey.All the best!Thank you!Binoy Roy

At the beginning of Romeo & Juliet...?

Rosaline.

Romeo and Juliet is one of the most celebrated romantic stories of all time, with Romeo considered to be the quintessential romantic hero. Upon closer analysis, Romeo can be characterized as a young man transformed by love. This can be seen in Romeo's initial interest in Rosaline, which is superficial and passive in comparison to the more complex and active relationship he develops with Juliet.

American Government: Can someone help me with this essay I have to do?

Interesting topic. As an example I would consider the right of a citizen to appeal to the Supreme Court. Several watershed amendments and changes to governmental process have occurred as a result.

Judulang v. Holder 2011 for example questions the extent to which lawful permanent citizens can seek relief from governmental deportation for crimes committed.
U.S. v. Home Concrete & Supply 2012 poses the question of limitations for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in terms of length of time taken before collecting unpaid taxes.

However protests can also be considered, Occupy Wall Street, the Trayvon Martin March etc.

To me this illustrates how through the judicial and civil process, citizens consistently exert regulatory influence over the government's behavior by the appeals they choose to make.This is the power the American citizen possesses compared with some places in the world.

So I would start with an interpretation of the quote, move on to a central example and a few supporting ones and then finish by explaining how the citizenry regulates itself through laws they approve of from the government. This settles the "not the job of the government to manage us" part.

A few poetic quotes like "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." (Margaret Mead) and you should be good to go I think.

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