Destructive uses of nationalism include propaganda to commit genocide.
A company can not commit a crime, the managers can.
An elephant
The word destruction is a noun. Destruction is the act of destroying something.
its not entrapment, its called "solicitation to commit"
It is said that a tuba played to play the act of the an Elephant stomping along
One main lesson George Orwell learns about imperialism in "Shooting an Elephant" is the destructive impact of colonialism on both the colonizer and the colonized. He learns that participating in the unjust system of imperialism robs individuals of their autonomy and forces them to act against their own beliefs. This is evident when he describes feeling pressured to shoot the elephant, despite his moral reservations and realization of the pointlessness of the act.
The word "destructive" means damaging or destroying.
One example of violence in Macbeth is Macbeth's murder of King Duncan in Act 2, Scene 2. Macbeth's ambitious desire to become king drives him to commit this heinous act, illustrating the destructive consequences of unchecked ambition and the violence that can arise from it.
Conspiracy.
frame the evil in an act they did not commit
In "Shooting an Elephant," the elephant symbolizes the power dynamics between the colonizers and the colonized. The decision to shoot the elephant represents the internal conflict faced by the narrator in upholding the oppressive system of imperialism. Ultimately, the elephant's death highlights the destructive nature of imperialism for both the colonizer and the colonized.