Answer:
The correct answer is option A
Explanation:
In the above situation where Hannah wants to support her claim about freedom of speech on internet forums. She is afraid that if the protection will turn into censorship of content which will completely ruin the purpose of internet, thus taking away freedom of speech.
The claim that internet providers are only supposed to provide internet services and should have nothing to do with the kind of content they are provided with can favor her argument.
He doesn’t believe santiago wants to travel to Africa
The purpose that the flashback serves in Act II of Our Town is to explain how George and Emily fell in love.
Before said flashback, <em>The Stage Manager</em> appears and says that before continuing with the story, we need to find out how George and Emily’s relationship began in the first place, and presents the situation where George and Emily first knew that they were meant for each other while having ice-cream at the local drugstore.
A foil is the near complete opposite of the main character (whichever character they want you to find a foil for).
Rainsford and Whitney were good hunting friends with numerous similar interests. They could not be foils because of how close in similarity they were. Even when they disagreed on how animals felt about being hunted, Whitney seemed open to and intrigued by Rainsford's points and way of thinking.
Ivan is a near irrelevant character, being a mere Cossack who follows whatever General Zaroff says. He is mindless and has almost zero traits to even compare to Rainsford, let alone any traits aside from a mindless follower to begin with.
The answer would be General Zaroff. This is almost like the cliche protagonist vs antagonist foil. Both of them are hunters, but different kinds. Zaroff got bored with animals and wanted to hunt human people instead, whereas Rainsford had enjoyed the thrill of an animal hunt and thinks that the hunting of people is murder. Zaroff is more heartless and cold, a killer, if you will. Rainsford seems to think highly of actual people, and had no interest in playing Zaroff's game.