Article on "craze of internet" and "revolutionary change on life of connon man "
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Craze of Internet
The craze of internet.
The internet has the World under it's hand. Not a person in this whole world lives without using their phone or other social media. Internet access throught the world changed every culture accordingly. People who loved each other in real life, are loving in dating apps, which is really bad.
Social networking sites such as Facebook or Instagram are the major distraction of this generations students. Boys and Girls who're teens have become addicted to these sites. Photography and modelling. This generations craze. People take photographs, model or edit them, post them on social media. And if they're getting more likes and comments, they're the happiest people in the world. And once they're not getting any likes, they act as if they're dead. Giving smartphones to kids made situations worse. Students these days are more concerned about connecting to their friend's on Facebook or Twitter rather than concentrating on their studies or assignments.
Parents are the cause to this. They buy their kids smartphones, give them internet and what not ? The parents must look into this problem caused by these social media sites. Parents should spend their time with kids so that the kids will stop using all these Unnecessary sites
Revolutionary change on the life of a common man:
The end of the Revolution and the dawn of the nineteenth century brought much societal change in America. Out was the time of the aristocratic gentleman and in was the self-made man; one who did not inherit his fortune, but toiled the earth and reaped the benefits of independence fought for in the previous decades. Americans of this era were beginning to create their own identity, leaving the trappings and traditions of Europe behind. Daniel La Motte echoes these old world trappings in the formality of his portrait and formal dress, whereas Squire Jack embodies the Jacksonian-era “common man,” casually posing on his front porch surveying his land, corn-cob pipe in hand.
Having re-asserted the new nation’s sense of independence after battling the British a second time in the War of 1812, the election in 1828 of Andrew Jackson indicated a shift towards more democratic ideals. While previous presidents rose to political prominence through family background, landed wealth in the original thirteen colonies, and education, Jackson’s humble background and Tennessee roots made his rise to the presidency a powerful metaphor for the self-reliance of the “common man.” During the Jacksonian Era, white men who did not own land gained the right to vote, and therefore more political power. Economically, American reliance on international trade with Europe began wane, in favor of the growth of industry and agriculture at home.
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