The correct answer is B. Gatekeeping
Explanation:
Gatekeeping refers to the process in which information is summarized, filtered or reduced in a way is understood by a general audience usually because the information is published for the general public. This occurs in mass media as editors, reporters and almost all agents involved cannot include all the information and therefore need to decide on which information will be included and which would be excluded. This occurs in the case presented as all the media sources created a simplified version that can be understood by the general public rather than all the information and statistical data that would be too much to process for the public and too difficult for those without an academical background. Therefore in this case gatekeeping is occurring as information is reduced because it was going to be published for a broad audience.
Answer:
Partisan politics.
Explanation:
That is basically just the spot-on definition for partisan politics, commitment to party over all else.
Answer:
conformity; compliance; obedience
Explanation:
Conformity: In social psychology, the term conformity is described as an agreement that an individual possesses with an authority figure or majority position that can be taken into consideration either for a desire to be liked or to be fit in a particular group or to confirm a specific role.
Compliance: In social psychology, the term compliance is described as the phenomenon through which an individual tends to change his or her behavior because of either direction or request made by another person.
Obedience: In social psychology, the term obedience is described as the compliance in the presence of different commands provided by an "authority figure".
Answer: Karl Marx
Explanation: Marx was the creator of the idea of transforming the entire economic system in order to promote the rights of underprivileged members of society, that is, most often workers. According to Marx, the workers in the capitalist systems were in a very subordinate position, exploited, and the whole capitalist system rested on their backs. Therefore, according to Marx, it was necessary to start the working class raise awareness of its rights, and embark on a political struggle for workers' rights, with the ultimate goal of changing social relations and transferring the economy into the hands of the working class. Of course, this was not possible with negotiations, but Marx advocated a serious political struggle, conflict with established political structures and even revolution.