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∙ 7y agoSameness was to prevent pain and embarrassment along with making the community for productive. The idea probably came form the people who were affected most by pain and had the whole community agree.
Wiki User
∙ 13y agoWiki User
∙ 11y agoPeople are always complaining about war and global warming etc.. Lois Lowry probably wanted to say, this is the alternative so which would we perfer.
Wiki User
∙ 12y agothats what i questioned?
Sameness was to prevent pain and embarrassment along with making the community for productive. The idea probably came form the people who were affected most by pain and had the whole community agree.
Sameness was to prevent pain and embarrassment along with making the community for productive. The idea probably came form the people who were affected most by pain and had the whole community agree.
not discriminated people for race gender religion respecting each differences
Women are more likely to develop PTSD than men
Women are more likely to develop PTSD than men
Because race only exists when people decide there are differences between people :)
David is a telepath, but there are other differences as well. He seems more compassionate than his parents, he definitely tries to be a protector, and his loyalty isn't to his family or community, but rather to people who think as he does. Ironically, this is something that he learns from his family... that love is conditional, and family comes after sameness... he just finds his sameness somewhere else.
Yes, weight and gender do contribute to differences in blood alcohol levels. Smaller people and females are typically more likely to get intoxicated on less.
Sameness is the Giver's world means that everyone is the same, no one is different. Everything looks this nondesciptive color, gray and everyone feels the same and everyone dresses the same
In the community color has disappeared ever since Sameness happened. Back and back and back before that time of period the people had chosen to not have color and into Sameness.
Ones gender identity is simply the gender that one is. Ones gender is decided by and for ones self without regard to what one was assigned at birth or what other peoples opinions of gender are. The importance of gender (identity) for someone can range from being very important to being something that one is indifferent about. Someone's gender (identity) is generally what one would answer to the question "what gender are you?" - such questions are often asked online, where one may have a username and picture on social media that doesn't doesn't indicate a particular gender to the person asking the question. In addition, the attached Venn diagram may help in answering this question. where the five parts (assigned gender at birth, gender identity, gender expression/presentation, gender role and, romantic or sexual orientation) are things that do not overlap, although for some people it maybe that these things are apart of how and why they identify the way they do, but that is up to each individual to decide for themself. For example, many people identify with the gender that they were assigned at birth, and some do not. Furthermore, someone may identify with being a man while expressing his gender in a way that's different to what is typically expected of men in his specific culture. There are many myths about gender that can make this topic hard to understand, as many people believe that certain things outside their decision making dictate what gender they are and therefore the genders other people. However, with the way gender is described above, an individual can decide what they believe without having to dictate this for others, which allows for people to freely be who they are and talk about what gender means to them without having to tell others who they are and what to do.
It's not quite that simple.When a person is born they are assigned a sex based purely on their external genitalia - sex is biosocial, we assigned sex based on our understanding of sex in human beings (e.g. penis = male / vulva = female). Sex is actually a combination of external genitalia, internal genitalia, secondary sexual characteristics, hormones, chromosomes, and the mind - it's not as black and white as male/female as there are intersex people and some trans people are born with minds that don't match the rest of their sex characteristics (e.g. a person with a penis may have a 'female mind').Gender is social, we raise someone to be a specific gender based on their sex - e.g. males as boys and females as girls, but not everyone's gender will match the sex they were assigned at birth also there are more than two genders. When it comes to gender it's not something you are born as or really something you chose, it is just something that you are...a cisgender person is not born their gender and do not chose their gender, it's the same with most transgender people.