"Fight for our lives" provides insight about the current state of public dialogue. As Deborah Tannen discusses idea discussions, news reporting methods, and conflict resolution methods, he said public interaction is becoming increasingly 'extremists'. She stated that the opposing approach has become a standard for public dialogue, like "everything we need to accomplish". She acknowledged that "opposition and opposition are necessary for cooperation and agreement," she believes that this balance has been improved in recent years.
"The British Science Museum points out that we are sharing our world with bacteria," the latest exhibition is "to fight for our lives". "A myriad of people live on you, and many are harmless, but they can also cause infection and death Thanks to antibiotics millions of people it is in homogeneity It has become a superb bacterium able to resist, our most powerful antibiotic. "Nature traces its own way, but we did not help. Since the first popular use of the 1940's, successful use of antibiotics with our carelessness resulted in the evolution of animals resisting this extreme insect. If the last antibiotic fails, we will be predominantly microorganisms, and we will find it as difficult to master as an ancestor of our former penicillin era.
Unless it is not, it is difficult to change everything. It is difficult to fix everything until it is not there. Every generation has war. These children never fought for living in our desert in the European trenches, the jungles of Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan and our freedom. They are still fighting officials elected by elections. They are continuing to armed the attackers so that they can stand in office with the money I will help them. The number of people who believe they have the same assault rifle right is beyond the lives of children who die from them