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Hi twenty-second century humans! Let me explain what life in the twenty-first century is like. I am 22 years old and I study at university for my Bachelors degree. I also work part time to support myself financially because I still live with my parents and I do not want to be a burden on them. I plan to become a chartered accountant in the next ten years so that I can buy a good house for myself in the suburbs since life in the city is quite stressful and noisy. I hope that some time in the future we will learn to act more responsibly towards the environment and be less wasteful. Sometimes I am also concerned about things having changed drastically since I was a kid which is something my parents did not feel at my age. I also hope to marry after I get a job. I have a girlfriend but I do not think I would settle down with her. When I am not studying I like to go bowling with my friends or watching movies. Most of my days are quite busy and hectic but I enjoy it because it will help me get a comfortable life in the future.
In the twenty-first century, decisions are made on the basis of a cost-benefit analysis. We weigh the costs of an alternative with the benefits and select the alternative with the best cost-to-benefit ratio. We have been doing this for decades since the United States became an economic giant because of its free enterprise culture. We believe in each individual's responsibility to shape their own life and consider him free and capable of making his own decisions. Sometimes, this becomes a cause for concern because we also believe in being responsible for the effects of our actions on others. Twenty-first century morals are also based on these beliefs. We believe those decisions to be moral that result in the best cost-benefit ratio for the greatest number of people. At the same time, we uphold people's moral rights to independence, freedom and privacy so that he or she may make decisions in their best interests. We believe such a moral code allows a free and prosperous society to develop. This reflects moral relativism and the weakening of absolutist moral principles in twenty-first century life. (Hinde, 2009)
In my opinion, and compassion that I experience. It helps to restore my faith in humanity because of the growing materialism in my society. I feel it is important for people to acknowledge the humanity in one another because that is what gives us emotional energy to accomplish great things. At the same time, I also feel happy when I feel that I have accomplished or achieved something. In that respect, I feel striving for material well-being is not that bad because wealth helps you to fulfill the needs of you and your family and to avoid the uncertainties of life. That is why I want to become a chartered accountant.
An important literary work of the twentieth century is the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. It was published in 1960 and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize. The novel is a story about a lawyer Atticus who defends a Black American against a rape accusation during the period of the Great Depression. Although the innocent Tom is convicted and is eventually killed despite Attic's best efforts to save him, the circumstances reveal the prejudices of the period.
This novel is an important piece reflecting one of the major social problems of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Societies are becoming more heterogeneous because of immigration and faster communication. The novel highlights discrimination against Blacks that reflects the social prejudice faced by religious…
The German suffering after the first world war and the humiliation of Germany with other nations gave the Nazis the opportunity to feed hatred of the Jews and at the same time promise that if the People gave in to the Nazi ideology, they would be in the land that would hold them a superior way of life. That the followers of Hitler followed the Ideals as true and that
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