Answer: The TV in Harrison Bergeron acts as a double-edged sword: It both placates the masses by keeping them in their homes and entrancing them with its glow, but it also acts as vehicle for Harrison to communicate to everyone watching that he is special and that he cannot and should not be "handicapped.":
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Answer:
A pea-picker is a derogatory reference to poor, migrant workers during the Great Depression.
So the word " depressed " or " wretched " describes the pea picker camp best.
Explanation:
The term "pea picker" is used to distinguish a group as a lower social class from some other similar groups. These people were unskilled, poorly educated workers, employable only in menial jobs, such as harvesting crops and, as such, received poor wages for working long hours under dreadful conditions.
In the excerpt from Act V, scene I of Romeo and Juliet Romeo's tragic flaw that is best reflected is <em>his reckless nature</em>. He has just known from Balthasar that Juliet is sleeping in a Capulet tomb so he defies the stars, which shows a reckless nature.
FEMA<span> (Federal Emergency Management Agency) mission is to support the citizens </span>
Both Jerry in "President Cleveland, Where Are You?" and Squeaky in "Raymond's Run" reach a point in where they realize that <span>A. helping others is more important than helping oneself.
Both of these characters arrive at the same conclusion in their respective stories, and that is that although it can be quite important to aid yourself, it is usually far more important to help others, and thus secure everyone's happiness.
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