...I believe peaceful resistance to laws positively impacts a free society. Although, some people take that to far and then it turns into violence, and they deserve punishment. Those who keep there actions against a law peaceful, should not necessarily be punished in my view. What should happen is that the government takes note of the actions and find ways to consider re-thinking that law. For example, when Rosa Parks took a stand against racial segregation, she was immediately arrested. It wasn't until after boycotting took place, that segregation laws were looked into and was considered to be changed. The government did the right thing to look into it after those events. In the end, a number of people became more free than they were before....
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...I believe peaceful resistance to laws have a positive impact on a free society. When one is displaying the act of civil disobedience, they should be able to justify why their opposing a law. How the law is unjust or how it negatively impacts the person itself or others. With a valid justification, peacefully disobeying the law and willing to accept the consequences is valid. While there are both positive and negative impact on a free society, I believe Rosa Parks has set a good example of how a peaceful resistance could positively impact a free society. On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks had stood up for herself on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama, while refusing to give up her seat. In her days, there were laws such as “whites only” in public places...
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...Peaceful resistance to laws positively impacts a free society by giving people the opportunity to civilly demonstrate their freedom by reacting to matters in a way they feel is appropriate. The great thing about our society is that people are able to feel involved in the government of their country--peaceful resistance is a great way to do so. This way, the people feel they have a choice in the matter; it gives them a way to be heard. As Henry David Thoreau stated, the government is not made up of a single man, nor should it be. Not all men are going to have the same opinions on a law, not everyone is going to be represented. Everyone must have two goals: do what you believe is right, and work to create a better government. If a man does not believe in the justice of a law and refuses to follow it, the true motive behind it should be both the striving to be his best self, as well as show the government what justice should really look like. Of course, the only reasonable way this can be done is by civil disobedience, having noble and respectable intents of self as well as the government one is knowledgeably a part of....
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...Peaceful resistance to laws, i believe can be a positive and negative impact on a free society. It can be both, because they can be shown in different perspectives. If there was a friendly riot in front of the capital building protesting the new parking lot being built on a historic site, they could simply hold up signs and sit on the steps, but some peaceful resistance can turn into violence depending the situation. If they were asked to leave quietly, they might have some leave and others that'll stay and protest louder and in a disrespectful way. This could leave to violence real fast. Cops could get involved, weapons could be used, and words might be said that shouldn’t have been. This would show the world that sometimes even peaceful resistance...
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...Peaceful resistance to laws is a positive thing for a free society. It is important that we as free peoples are able to let our governments know that we don't like what they're doing. The peaceful protests in Portland, Oregon, that have been marred by anarchists taking advantage of the civil discourse, are to let the people of the United States know that they are not okay with what is going on. It's akin to what Mohammed Ali did in the 1960's, He let the government know that He was not being represented by them in a way he agreed with. The government in most free societies today are based on the quintessential prospect of being "for the people". If some would wish to say something about the founders of the United States all one must say back is that we were founded by revolutionaries. If they had lost the war then they would have been called traitors and conspirators in our history. The fought for their rights and for their ideas, why should the people now be prevented from doing so peacefully? We have the right to freely assemble, to speak freely, and our oft cited Founding father Thomas Jefferson believes that the people have the right to take the government apart and rebuild it as they see fit. If people in the United states weren't allowed to advocate for their rights outside a courtroom or congressional hall then people...
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...Insulin Resistance Insulin is a hormone that helps to control blood sugar (glucose) levels in the body. It is made in the pancreas. Insulin allows glucose to enter into the cells of the body. Insulin sensitivity refers to how the body responds to insulin. Insulin resistance occurs when cells in the body do not respond properly to insulin made by the pancreas and are not able to absorb glucose from the bloodstream. Insulin resistance results in high blood glucose levels (hyperglycemia) and can lead to problems, including: • Prediabetes. • Type 2 diabetes (type 2 diabetes mellitus). • Heart disease. • High blood pressure (hypertension). • Stroke. • Polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). • Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. CAUSES...
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...There are many ways to protest against something you believe is not right. One major way that has been used in many historical occurrences is peaceful resistance or ,also known as, civil disobedience. To some, any type of protest is wrong, but I believe that if someone does not agree with something, they have the right to speak up about it. Peaceful resistance, in my opinion, does indeed positively impact a free society. A free society is a society in which people have the right to exercise their unlimited freedoms, as long as they do not interfere with others being able to do so. It would not be a free society if nobody was able to express their thoughts about a certain topic. I am completely for expressing your own freedoms. What people do not seem to comprehend is that just because somebody does not have the same values and...
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...Jewish Resistance Fighters In World War II Background: There were many different types of resistance against the Nazi regime during World War Two some involving those who were directly targeted by the Nazis and those that were passive or against the Nazis. Aims: In this report I plan to talk about the different groups of people resisted to the German rule, such as; • Those who were helped by the allies or other anti-Nazi organisations • Those who independently resisted the Nazi rule despite not being directly targeted by them. • Those who were in ghettos or work camps • People who escaped German Concentration Camps. • Tito's Resistance group During the Holocaust, around twenty five thousand Jewish people actively resisted the Nazi party in every European country that was occupied by Axis powers. Most of these Jews joined existing non-Jewish resistance groups and although these people were fighting for the same cause, some Jews still concealed their religion due to the long embedded anti-Semitism in Europe....
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...I believe that the peaceful resistance to unjust laws do in fact positively impact a free society. In order to properly display and explain my reasoning, I must first provide the definition of what an unjust law is. An unjust law is any law that does not align with the natural law as known by reason and common sense. Once one is able to understand this definition, it is easier to explain the positive impact that peaceful resistance has on a free society. The effect is positive because it gives voice to unjust laws. I would like to use the example provided of “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” written by Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. One of the first points that Dr. King address is that he knows that he is supposed to be in jail. He peacefully resisted and accepted the given consequences. The later goes on to explain what peaceful resistance is and how to properly achieve it. He...
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...Rose Resistance Group It was September 1, 1939 and Adolf Hitler had just invaded Poland with Britain and France declaring war on Germany 2 days later (Cain, 2014). This marked the beginning of World War II. Hitler continued his march through Europe invading Denmark and Norway in 1940, launching the Blitzkrieg in May of 1940 against Holland and Belgium which were subsequently occupied by the Third Reich. In early 1941, Italy and Germany attacked Yugoslavia, Greece and Crete and then on June 22, 1941 Hitler sends nearly 3 million soldiers and 3,500 tanks into Russia. Stalin was stunned because Russia had just signed a treaty with Germany in 1939 but then immediately signed a mutual assistance treaty with Britain and launched an Eastern front battle claiming 20 million casualties. Europe was in ruins and many of its people were murdered, seeking refuge or forming resistance groups against Hitler’s regime. Several anti-Nazi movements began, one of which was The White Rose Resistance Group based out of Munich, Germany at the University....
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...This is a critique on the paper Stability and change: an institutional study of management accounting change written by Associate Prof. Dr. Siti Nabiha Abdul Khalid and Proffesor Robert W. Scapens Purpose The purpose of this paper, as stated on the first page, is to explore the relationship between stability and change within the process of accounting change. It focuses on the ceremonial implementation of value-based management and how key performance indicators can become decoupled from day-to-day activities which thereby creates a level of stability which can be ultimately contributed to the accounting change. Theoretical Framework This paper uses the framework set out by Burns and Scapens (2000) which is mainly based in Old Institutional Economics (OIE). In this paper institutions are defined as “The shared taken-for-granted assumptions which identify categories of human actors and their appropriate activities and relationships”. (Siti-Nabiha, A. and Scapens, R. (2005), Stability and change: an institutional study of management accounting change, Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Vol 18, No. 1, pg 46) Burns and Scapens argue that, when a particular management accounting practice is decided on, that over time this practice becomes accepted as “the way things are done”. The behaviour is disassociated from the original reason for the choice of this practice and comes to be applied in a rule-like manner and as a routine activity. The original...
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...Bio 242 AM Reading Report 1 May 29th, 2014 Paper reviewed: Woyach, J.A. et al. 2014. Resistance mechanisms for the Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor ibrutinib. NEMJ. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1400029 Summary of paper: Ibrutinib acts as an irreversible inhibitor of Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) that induces a modest amount of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cell apoptosis stopping B-cell receptor signaling and proliferation in vitro. Ibrutinib has been shown to have clinically significant activity in patients with relapsed CLL with 71% of patients having complete or partial response and 15-20% of patients having at least a partial response. Patients treated with Ibrutinib have a 75% progression-free survival rate. This paper investigated possible resistance mechanisms to Ibrutinib associated with mutations in BTK. Mutations were determined using whole-exome sequencing of baseline samples of patients with CLL and compared to whole-exome sequences of the patients after relapse. A cysteine-to-serine mutation in BTK at the biding site was found along with three gain-of-function mutations that are downstream from the BTK binding site that lead to autonomous B-cell receptor activity. Bias of paper: The paper was not biased. Research was funded by Funded by the National Cancer Institute and other institutions. No conflicts of interest were included in this paper. Conclusion supported? Mutations of BTK binding site and B-cell receptor pathways in this study suggest...
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...RESEARCH ARTICLE CRITIQUE Biomedical Science Brief summary The article selected for this paper is “A study into the potential role of Survivin localisation in resistance to drug-induced apoptosis” written by Helen Angell. The paper is about the role of an anti-apoptotic factor from the class of caspases. The subcellular localisation of surviving can play important role in the therapy of breast cancer. Cancer is an abnormal process in which the cellular apoptosis is inhibited. Survivin is a protein known to regulate cell division and apoptosis. Chemotherapy in cancer patients in targeted to induce apoptosis. Surviving has been known to be localised in the cytoplasm and nucleus of the cells. The main therapeutic role of Survivin comes from the fact that the sensitivity of the breast cancer cells to chemotherapy is increased in its presence within the nucleus. Description of the methods and techniques used Various methods have been used by the author. All lab-based methods are used for the determination of localisation and presence of the protein in the cell. • The fourth method used is tissue culture, for the purpose of over expression the protein in the selected cells. • Second method subcellular fractionation was done for the separation of the cellular components. • Immunoblotting was chosen...
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...HR587 Managing Organizational Change Course Project Expectations Introduction The Course Project enables students to integrate and build onto course materials and discussions by doing a Diagnostic Paper (Option 1) of a significant change initiative or by writing a Research Paper (Option 2) that goes beyond what has been covered in the course. For both options the student is required to do the following: 1. Submit a Draft of your proposed paper during Week 4 so that the instructor can provide guidance and advice. 2. Submit a 15-20 page (double spaced) course project (Option 1 or 2) by the end of Week 7. Note: An Appendix may be used for background documents. Those pages do not count toward the 15-20 page paper. Options: Option 1: Diagnostic Paper Applying models and concepts from the course, analyze a significant change initiative you have observed, have been affected by or have had a hand in implementing in your organization. It can be a change that your organization is currently undergoing, or one that has recently been completed. The organization that is in your paper could also be one that you worked for in the past. However, you must know enough about the change to be able to do a comprehensive analysis. Examples of change you might consider include: * Restructuring or reorganization * Downsizing or rapid expansion * Outsourcing * Technical or work process redesign * Merger or acquisition * Benchmarking or reengineering ...
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...Search thousands of free essays... Search Type in your essay topic: ex. Vietnam War JOIN LOGIN CUSTOM ESSAYS HELP CONTACT Concord Book Paper Essay Below is a free essay on "Concord Book Paper" from Anti Essays, your source for free research papers, essays, and term paper examples. Join Anti Essays to read full essay. Already a Member? Login Now Please upgrade your account to view this essay on Concord Book Paper. Running head: CONCORD BOOKSHOP PAPER Submitted by: jmb529 Concord Bookshop Paper Jonell Benson HCS/587 Ginger Weatherston University of Phoenix Concord Bookshop Paper This paper will discuss the organizational change process from the readings of, “Tales of Woe at Concord Bookshop.” The variety of change processes gives change leaders and administrators the ability to visualize the internal and external components of change that will go against the status quo and possibly cause a clash between the owners and the workers. The phases in the organizational change model are strategic responsiveness, behavioral change, employee participation and resistance to change. Also included, are the three faces of change and trigger events and change. I will describe two portions of the change process that were not completed or implemented at the Concord Bookshop, which caused failure of the change process. While attempting to implement change, the change leader must first assess the need for change. There was an increase in the amount of competition with...
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