Math, asked by gagndeep11, 11 months ago

tell me ans smart guys​

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Answered by Tanaysinha10
0

Answer:

What I can do is to persuade my family to avoid products that contain drugs.

Answered by khushal546
0

&lt;p style="color:cyan;font-family:cursive; background: black;font size:25px;"&gt; There is a lot of marijuana. It is a cultural thing, part of a very popular festival called the Festival of Colors,” says Vasu Yajnik-Setia, Executive Director of Drug-Free World India. The festival, also known as Holi, is a day celebrated in India by covering friends, family and even strangers with colored powder. It also often includes the consumption of “bhang,” an edible cannabis preparation. As the preferred plant of Shiva, the Indian God of Destruction, it is thus not surprising that marijuana is a dominant force in India’s illicit drug trade.</p><p></p><p>To counter this, Vasu formed her first Drug-Free World group in New Delhi in late 2016. They quickly hit the streets. “We identified Raahgiri [a citizens’ initiative to reclaim their streets] as a good platform to start dissemination drives,” she says.</p><p></p><p>Aside from street distribution, Vasu also established a team of lecturers who visit schools and groups delivering DFW seminars, including to unprivileged students of the Sunaayy Foundation and at the Rao Ram Singh Public School, which has the motto, “knowledge, service, charity.” There are also the bi-annual Sikh Career Guidance Fairs where secondary students and teachers get materials and sign drug-free pledges. “Because a child’s first encounter with drugs can happen at any age, the solution is to get to them before the peddlers do,” Vasu says. But in a country of 1.3 billion, one group is just not enough.

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