Premium Essay

Mark Hertsgaard Analysis

Submitted By
Words 461
Pages 2
Mark Hertsgaard spoke about many things that an American Citizen may have today that may be taken for granted. He discussed various thing that may not normally cross ones mind. Such as having access to grocery stores for food, access to clean drinking water, having multiple cars per family, or simply a washer and dryer for clothes. All of those things were mentioned in the book, and each of them cause a reader to think about the different things that they may have that others have never heard of. My life has been shaped by the experiences that they have had in life, the things that they have, and the things that they may one. For the eighteen years that I have been alive, everything that I have done or been apart of in some way or another has shaped who I am as a person. I have had vitiligo from a vary young age, and when I first started to get white splotches on my skin my parents did not know what to do. So naturally I spent a lot of time with various doctors. That time spent with those doctors then, combined with the time that I have spent with my team of doctors for my migraines, sparked my interest in medicine. Seeing how they helped me and how they spoke of helping others made me …show more content…
For example my computer, I use my computer for all kinds of research. I have different medical apps for when I am reading something and need a visual thats not in the book, sometimes I use it as my book. Or when I cannot figure something out for some project that I am working on, I use the webcam to talk to different friends that I have and we brainstorm together on that topic. I understand that the things that I have been given by my parents should not be taken for granted. I have been to some of the poorest parts of Mexico, I have family there, and the things that I have in comparison to the things that they have are not in day. Running water there, runs from a well and has to be boiled to be of any use for

Similar Documents

Free Essay

A Cursed Love

...Resources for Teaching Prepared by Lynette Ledoux Copyright © 2007 by Bedford/St. Martin’s All rights reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. 2 1 f e 0 9 d c 8 7 b a For information, write: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 75 Arlington Street, Boston, MA 02116 (617-399-4000) ISBN-10: 0–312–44705–1 ISBN-13: 978–0–312–44705–2 Instructors who have adopted Rereading America, Seventh Edition, as a textbook for a course are authorized to duplicate portions of this manual for their students. Preface This isn’t really a teacher’s manual, not, at least, in the sense of a catechism of questions and correct answers and interpretations. Because the questions provided after each selection in Rereading America are meant to stimulate dialogue and debate — to generate rather than terminate discourse — they rarely lend themselves to a single appropriate response. So, while we’ll try to clarify what we had in mind when framing a few of the knottier questions, we won’t be offering you a list of “right” answers. Instead, regard this manual as your personal support group. Since the publication of the first edition, we’ve had the chance to learn from the experiences of hundreds of instructors nationwide, and we’d like to use this manual as a forum where we can share some of their concerns, suggestions, experiments, and hints. We’ll begin with a roundtable on issues you’ll probably want to address before you meet your class. In the first section of this manual, we’ll discuss approaches to...

Words: 57178 - Pages: 229

Premium Essay

Bp Marketing Sustainability

...BP: Marketing Case Study Sarah Allen, Matthew Earhart, Amelia Pye I. Case Summary BP plc, formerly known as British Petroleum and Anglo-Persian Oil Company, is a multinational oil and gas company headquartered in London, England (“BP”). It is the fifth-largest company in the world measured by 2012 revenues (BP Annual Report 51). Its extensive corporate history has created a non-malleable image and reputation which present-day marketing strategies must overcome in order to effectively promote the ideals of industry leadership and ethical responsibility. BP is faced with significant challenges to its brand as a consequence of its widely-known safety and environmental policy issues. An explosion at one of its Texas refineries caused fifteen deaths, 170 injuries, and a violation of the Clean Air Act in 2005. Years of neglecting pipeline corrosion led to its violation of the Clean Water Act in 2006 when Alaskan oil pipelines leaked crude oil into the tundra. The following year, another BP spill occurred near Prudhoe Bay, leaking toxic chemicals into the tundra and thus killing wildlife and vegetation (“BP Gulf Coast Disaster and Recovery”). These incidents, however, were dwarfed by an explosion at BP’s Gulf of Mexico offshore drilling rig, Deepwater Horizon, in April 2010. The explosion caused the largest accidental marine oil spill in the history of the petroleum industry. It resulted in the deaths of eleven people and the release of an estimated 210 million gallons...

Words: 4185 - Pages: 17