第二份英文作業/2018.08.30-2019.01.18/丁禾

出自六年制學程
在2018年9月26日 (三) 21:51由丁禾對話 | 貢獻所做的修訂版本

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2018.09.03~2018.09.09

  1. Side of seagrass please: Scientists find omnivorous shark
  2. Obama calls Trump 'a symptom, not the cause' of U.S. division and polarization
  3. India Hunts Man-Eating Tiger Blamed for 13 Deaths
  4. Idlib explained: Why war looms large over Syria's last rebel stronghold
  5. Sweden votes in election amid heated debate on immigration
  6. China Is Detaining Muslims in Vast Numbers. The Goal: ‘Transformation.’

2018.09.10~2018.09.16

  1. Don’t Let Migrant Kids Rot
  2. Support grows for Serena Williams's sexism accusations at U.S. Open
  3. 7 injured in Paris knife attack
  4. North Korea stages huge military parade, holds back on advanced missiles
  5. Egypt court sentences 75 to death over 2013 protest
  6. UN rights boss urges Egypt to overturn mass death sentences
  7. San Francisco statue criticized as racist to Indigenous people removed
  8. Deadly storm Florence will soak Carolinas all weekend
  9. Typhoon Mangkhut kills dozens in the Philippines
  10. Gunmen dressed as mariachi musicians kill 5 in Mexico City
  11. Texas border patrol agent charged with murder in deaths of 4 women

影片

  1. CNN 10 September 14 2018 - CNN Student News
  2. San Francisco The search for other Earth-like planets - Olivier Guyon
  3. What triggers a chemical reaction? - Kareem Jarrah
  4. Why You Should Wake Up at 4:30 AM Every Day, According To A Navy Seal
  5. How a dragonfly's brain is designed to kill | DIY Neuroscience, a TED series

2018.09.17~2018.09.23

  1. Russia, Turkey say they'll patrol demilitarized zone in Syrian city of Idlib
  2. Trump Says Tariffs Will Save American Factories. History Shows Otherwise.
  3. Machines will do more than half the work by 2025, report predicts
  4. You can't stop checking your phone because Silicon Valley designed it that way
  5. Uighurs in Canada fear deportation after China's crackdown on Turkic Muslims
  6. Her dense breast tissue hid cancer for years. Now she's warning others
  7. U.S. slashes number of refugees it will accept, citing 'safety and well-being' of Americans
  8. Leaving Venezuela: How Colombia is shouldering a migration crisis
  9. Cody Wilson, creator of 3D-printed guns, flies to Taiwan amid underage-sex allegation
  10. Think cloth bags are better for the environment? Think again
  11. She disappeared on a family camping trip. 52 years later, her sister is still looking
  12. India's PM signs order setting penalties for men who attempt instant divorce
  13. 'I was so afraid': Refugees falling prey to CRA scam
  14. Why notifications are telling you what other people are doing
  15. It's time to lose the 'negative attitude' about wasps, says researcher
  16. 'Devastating' tornado tears through Ottawa-Gatineau

影片

  1. How better tech could protect us from distraction
  2. How a handful of tech companies control billions of minds every day
  3. Your fingerprints reveal more than you think
  4. What would happen if every human suddenly disappeared?
  5. 10 things you didn't know about orgasm
  6. A call to men
  7. The press trampled on my privacy. Here's how I took back my story
  8. Did the global response to 9/11 make us safer?

Did the global response to 9/11 make us safer?

After the 911 attack took place in 2001, international security issue had became an important issue for United State and European countries. Most of countries chose to restrict their immigration policy and spend more money on military action targeting terrorist group. Most of citizens in the countries believed the decisions made by their governments could make their homes a safer place; However, conflict and security researcher Benedetta Berti disagreed with them. “The key of security is to protect civilian,” stated the woman who spent a decade researching conflicts in the Middle East in one of her TED talk. She said that the only way to ensure long-term peace was to give human rights to those who needed it. Targeting certain groups of people would only increase hatred between two sides. Safty and dignity were crucial for developing a health mind. Many people in the Middle East had already suffered from the trauma brought by wars. Treating them as enemy would only increase their anger towards Western country, which would create more threats to international security.


I agree with her opinion. Killing will only increase more hatred. I’ve read a new article about Chinese government putting Uyghurs in political camps. The communist party thinks Uyghurs Muslim culture is a threat to China’s unity, so they forces thousands of people going to the camps and swearing their loyalty to the Communist Party of China. According to one of the survivor from those camp, the pressure, which Chinese government have put on him, make him wants to revenge to those who had suppressed him. Leaders of countries really need to adjust thier admistartion of security.

2018.9.24~2018.9.30

  1. How BBC Africa uncovered the story behind an execution video of women and children
  2. Radio ad claiming to debunk 'myths' of residential schools draws criticism
  3. MPs unanimously declare Myanmar crackdown on Rohingya a 'genocide'
  4. Rohingya refugee thanks Canada 'from the bottom of our hearts' after genocide motion
  5. Trump rejects globalism, touts 'doctrine of patriotism' at UN General Assembly
  6. WHO warns of Ebola 'perfect storm' in Congo
  7. The Tattooist of Auschwitz, and the love that helped him survive

影片

  1. Why do cats act so weird?
  2. What are animals thinking and feeling?