English, asked by aiswaryas1923, 5 months ago

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paid, and
and grip
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that ha
alk abol
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entialise
divide
118geste
f write
off the faucets one by one, so that slowly we begin to notice
that the available air, still breathable, still free, is thinning. The
time comes when we find that we are breathing more heavily,
perhaps even gasping for air. By this time, many of us would
have begun to protest. to condemn the reduction in the air
supply, and to argue loudly for the right to freely available,
broadly breathable air. Scarcity, you could say, creates demand.
Liberty is the air we breathe, and we live in a part of the
world where, imperfect as the supply is, it is, nevertheless, freely
available, at least to those of us who aren't black youngsters
wearing hoodies in Miami, and broadly breathable, unless, of
course, we're women in red states trying to make free choices
about our own bodies. Imperfectly free, imperfectly breathable,
but when it is breathable and free we don't need to make a song
and dance about it. We take it for granted and get on with our
day. And at night, as we fall asleep, we assume we will be free
tomorrow, because we were free today.
The creative act requires not only freedom but also this
assumption of freedom. If the creative artist worries if he will
still be free tomorrow, then he will not be free today. If he is afraid
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lots
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Answers

Answered by ridhimasharan2
0

Answer:

what is this question

Explanation:

i do t know

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