Have you ever heard this saying that the customer is always right well sometimes they are and sometimes their not but its imporant to have this rule because no drama equals happiness i know this rule because i worked at the dallas state fair and i was selling from a food stand
Fables are characterized by their moral lessons and can be passed down to teach listeners and readers good advice, proper behaviours, good manners and the difference between right and wrong.
There always is a simple conflict and a resolution followed by a short pitchy statement expressing a general rule or a conduct to be ruled by.
<h3 /><h3>Steps in writing a good fable</h3>
These 5 steps can help you write a good fable.
- Determine the moral of the story
- Carefully select the characters.
- Pick traits characters will display
- Determine the conflict and shape it.
- Write.
Writing a fable can be always be an interesting as one can get out of it a lot of morals and value.
Read more about fables here:
brainly.com/question/4378521
They symbolize hope within the novel. When Tom Robinson is on trial and is eventually killed, the children experience a loss of innocence which is later followed by a period of recovery, similar to that of the camellias. At first, Jem is extremely distraught by Robinson's death, thinking that the court would treat all men equal, but the children do not let that event make them think all of the world is evil and prejudiced and eventually heal, knowing that there will be evil in the world yet they can be the good in it. Jem, who is older than Scout, experiences a regrowing after Robinson's death which is juxtaposed against the camellias he destroyed earlier in the book. I hope my explanation helps! ^u^
Answer:
First of all, God I love this book. It's so good. SO good.
Anyways, for your answer. The media is "charging him with his own murder" because they're basically saying that because he'd made mistakes, he deserved to die. They believed that Khalil had dealt drugs, and thought that because he'd dealt drugs, he somehow had it coming.
Yes, Khalil had made mistakes in his life. No, he did not deserve to die. Everyone has made mistakes, and noone deserves to die because of them. Life's worth has no equal, and Khalil's mistakes did not atone for his death.
A lot of the reason the media believed this was because he was black. In the eyes of the media, if you happen to be a minority and you have made mistakes, murdering you is pardonable.
Because they thought Khalil basically deserved his death, noone would help him. Basically everyone except for those who knew him or who understood, just turned a blind eye, or blatantly took the side of the officer who'd killed Khalil. They'd said that the officer had done right, taking a "criminal" out of this world, even though Khalil had never hurt anyone.
I hope this helps!! Just ask if you need clarification or help with anything else about The Hate U Give.