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Search results 211 - 220 of 832 matching essays
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211: Government's Welfare Programs
... how welfare should be cut or minimized. The debate is simple enough, but the argument on welfare's benefits and drawbacks is not. On the pro side of the argument, on which I stand, welfare aids poor families as well as the economy and may help to reduce crime. Welfare's benefits far out weigh its drawbacks. Welfare generally helps poor families survive in today's economy by providing a means ... this income from welfare, crime is reduced. This is because there is now more income so the poor no longer have the need to go out and commit crimes to attain that income. Welfare also aids in improving the economy because the children of these families can afford to go to school and have a chance to make someone of themselves. Instead of enrolling in welfare themselves, in the future these ...
212: How America Should React To Ho
... gays and lesbians were discriminated against. But homosexuals were and still are treated unfairly on the basis that they undermine our morality, that they present danger to our children and that they are transmitters of AIDs far more than heterosexuals. Today many gays and lesbians come out of "the closet" and demand the same rights that heterosexual take for granted. We have to admit that some steps have been made to ... to see their children happy and hope that they will find somebody to love and share their life. Why should not society find it possible to share the same maturity. Moreover, in the wake of AIDs encouraging gay monogamy is simply rational public policy. However, according to Washington Post poll 70 percent of Americans oppose same-sex marriage, yet only 53 percent oppose homosexual relationship between consenting adults (Francoure 246). Some ...
213: Cloning And Its Implications
... be extremely different. Medical departments see cloning as a way of providing needed organs such as the heart and lung. Doctors might also view cloning as a way to find cures for diseases such as aids and cancer. Should people be created for the purpose of dying? Many people believe it is unjust to use animals for testing various products for humans, such as makeup and shampoo. Creating life for the ... dismantling society’s belief of fate. Are people trying to tamper with what is meant to be? Is it not the fate of one to contract a deadly disease? The most innocent person can contract AIDS or cancer. It is not something that is planned or thought about. People do not think that it will happen to them. Whatever a person believes to bring about life, God, Mohammed, gases, or a ...
214: "A Man for All Seasons" by Robert Bolt: More's Moral Dilemma
... he still sticks to what he believes in and what his religion says to do, although he dies for it. The moral dilemma More faces is similar to the moral dilemma of someone who has AIDS. If you have AIDS, you have no good way of dealing with it. More displays what a wonderful a person he is by choosing to not go against what he believed in, even though he got executed for it ...
215: How America Should React To Ho
... gays and lesbians were discriminated against. But homosexuals were and still are treated unfairly on the basis that they undermine our morality, that they present danger to our children and that they are transmitters of AIDs far more than heterosexuals. Today many gays and lesbians come out of "the closet" and demand the same rights that heterosexual take for granted. We have to admit that some steps have been made to ... to see their children happy and hope that they will find somebody to love and share their life. Why should not society find it possible to share the same maturity. Moreover, in the wake of AIDs encouraging gay monogamy is simply rational public policy. However, according to Washington Post poll 70 percent of Americans oppose same-sex marriage, yet only 53 percent oppose homosexual relationship between consenting adults (Francoure 246). Some ...
216: Alternative Medicine
... new Office of Alternative Medicine. The office was created last year under pressure from a Congress alarmed by the soaring cost of high-tech healing and the frustrating fact that so many ailments such as: AIDS, cancer, arthritis, back pain, which have yet to yield to standard medicine”(Toufexis,1993). The cost of standard medical care has risen dramatically. For example, a simple arthroscopic cartilage repair on an outpatient basis costs ... aches and pains at some point in their lifetime. The annual cost to U.S. society of treating the ubiquitous ailment was recently tallied at a crippling 24 billion dollars, compared with $6 billion for AIDS and $4 billion for lung cancer. If spinal manipulation could ease even a fraction of that financial burden, remaining skeptics might be forced to stifle their misgivings or get cracking themselves”(Purvis,1991). In almost ...
217: Cryogenic
... work, it will have the same result as if I was buried or cremated." (O'Connor, 1997) Most cryonicists had to keep the frozen body in good condition. The trick is maintaining victims of cancer, AIDS, heart disease, or old age until then. Maintaining mean preserving the structures of the brain that record the memory and the personality. Only when these are lost are the people truly, permanently, irrevocably dead. That ... had ruined his life as a jazz musician. He hoped that future science could make him whole again." (Bagliuo, 1994) All this person wanted is to recovered completely by using future science to heal him. "AIDS victims or patients with cancer who felt bitterly deprived of their fair ration of life and were hoping for more." (Bagliuo, 1994) These people as well wanted to use future technology to heal them. "A ...
218: Trends In Policing
... come to expect. With this new area also came many technological advancements. The use of automobiles became more practical with the introduction of quality roads, the use of computers in law enforcement, and the scientific aids which became available in the use of gathering evidence. It is because of these advancements that made law enforcement a more professional field and proved Vollmer s theory that officers should be college educated. The ... scene. Fibers from clothing can now be traced, paint transferred from one object to another during the commission of a crime, and ballistics from a firearm are just a few of the scientific advancements that aids the police in the war against crime. Not all the changes in this era of reform have been positive ones, we have seen the escalation of the use of drugs during this era, the gang ...
219: Genetic Engineering 4
... protein in its milk or blood. The protein could then be extracted and used in human treatments for various diseases or disorders (Dumesic 2). This could also lead to a prevention and or cure for AIDS and cancer. A few people have successfully continued to live with AIDS or cancer, and in some cases the disease has gone away. Part of their genetic structure has strengthened the immune system to the point that it rids the body of these diseases. Their genes could ...
220: Essay On Human Sexual History
... in fact I am sure it did, however, I feel that it was not until the 5o’s and onward that people began to openly admit to it. In the 80’s the epidemic of AIDS was discovered, as well as one of the most common methods of procreating the disease: homosexuality. It was the climax of sexual boundaries and taboos to be broken. The media was becoming overly fascinated with ... past generation’s sexual mistakes and unhygienic choices. In present time, every one out of four women will get raped, while every one out of six men will get raped. Also, the chances of receiving AIDS are more than that of getting into a car accident. With problems like over population, rape, and sexually transmitted diseases, alternatives to sex are needed more than ever. Personally, I will not believe that modern ...


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