Democracy and freedom go hand in hand do you agree ? Why or why not ?
Answers
Answer:
Yes, Agreed
Explanation:
Overpopulation, together with the resulting natural calamities, is an enduring belief in the world of environmental activism. Devastating as it is, COVID-19 is not the first pandemic that has taught humanity a few things about its relationship with mother nature, and it likely won't be the last.
At face value, having too many people is obviously bad news: Densely populated cities and packed marketplaces have become petri dishes for the coronavirus, while containing the disease means social distancing, halting the economy and locking down entire urban areas and even countries.
As much as it has turned people's lives upside down, the pandemic has been regarded by many as an overdue relief for the planet. As numerous media reports observed, Venice's canals cleared up, as did New Delhi's sky, among the myriad evidence of the environment improving while humans stayed home. There was also a significant drop in global CO2 emissions after people stopped driving and flying, what climate advocates couldn't achieve for many years.
"Earth is recovering. We are the virus," the Twitter sphere proclaimed in chorus. This view is well-articulated in Richard Preston's bestseller "The Hot Zone" about the first Ebola