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Firstly we are happier than our fore-fathers because the present generation enjoys sound health brought about by science and technology. In the olden days, many people died rather untimely due to some undiagnosed diseases but today, medical technology has improved tremendously that it now postpones death. Recently, computer technology has been brought into medical field and so future diseases can be easily detected and prevented. Today, little children are immunized against childhood diseases and this has brought about rising population at a geometric progression. It was very much unlike the era of our fore-fathers when outbreak of any epidemic could n early wipe out a whole area. You see, our fore-fathers lived rather sad life due to a very high death rate brought about by their primitive herbs which has less value. Secondly, we live happier life than our fore-fathers in the area of agriculture. In the olden days our ancestors practiced crude form of agriculture. They were wandering fruit gatherers. At their best they practiced subsistence agriculture. However, the modern generation practices mechanized and intensive agriculture. Today, the government allocates huge sums of money every fiscal year to boost agriculture. We now engage in co-operative farming to raise enough capital to buy sophisticated machinery to boost production as against crude implements of the old. Today we export cahs crops such as cocoa and coffee, to other advanced countries of the world. This is a means of taking part in international trade thereby getting industrial goods from advanced countries, unlike our ancestors who never enjoyed all these. So we live a happier life than them because we enjoy better standard of living. Thirdly, in the area of telecommunication technology, the modern generation lives a happier life than our fore-fathers. In the olden days the means of communication was not only manual but primitive. Information was disseminated by trekking long distances as against today when modern information systems are in place. These among others, include computers, television, radio, fax and others. it is not uncommon today to watch live a football match played thousands of kilometers away. Today, we can telephone Russia or America, distance notwithstanding, and get reply within few minutes. All these were unknown to our fore-fathers. The modern telecommunication technology has brought about cross fertilization of ideas which fosters economic development of the modern world. This perhaps has brought about inter-dependence in the modern economic system. With this, one knows very well that we live a happier life than our fore-fathers. Ladies and Gentlemen, I heard my learned opponent say that our fore-fathers lived happier life because they ate fresh food and lived longer life but I dis-concur. This is because today, we get variety of food from all over the world, even those food items not produced in our continent. Also, modern medicine has brought about longevity due to the contents and components of imported food items which were not available to our fore-fathers who did not enjoy balanced diet as we do. Our fore-fathers only ate what they produced locally so the modern generation lives a happier life. In conclusion, there is no shadow of doubt in my mind that I have convinced the audience, including my learned opponent and the doubting Thomases beyond doubt, that we live a happier life than our fore-fathers who only lived primitive life by crude and unscientific means, and had no contact with modern civilization.
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Are we any happier than our forefathers?
Modern life has become synonymous with requiring more, consuming more, and destroying more. The quality of life has deteriorated and has become starved of human values. The satisfaction of life comes not so much from creature comforts as from the smile of a loved one, from sharing the joys and sorrows of our neighbours from helping a blind man cross the road and from seeing children grow up in a clean and safe environment. How simple and attractive all these images are and yet so far and difficult to achieve in today’s confused and mixed up world.
We do not have to go far to see the rot that has set into modern life. However, it is not unlikely, that on looking around, we might find our vision obscured by smoke and smog owing to the symbols of prosperity and progress the bars and buses; factories and power plants, etc. We are systematically destroying the very air that gives us life and the earth that sustains us.
Today, we have a wide variety of foods to choose from but the truth of the matter is that modern food growing techniques use pesticides and fertilizers and produce food that is positively unhealthy, if not dangerous. Heart-related ailments—blood pressure and hypertension—are offshoots of this diet. Is it not ironical that in spite of advancement in techniques of growing food, the world has never been as hungry and starved as now?
Sociologically, the obsession with material acquisition, the hallmark of so-called success, has created tremendous conflicts in society. The security of the joint family has been replaced by individualism of nuclear families. Alienation loneliness and maladjustment—these have led to neurosis. People are ready to sacrifice health and happiness, love and caring relationships and prefer to pursue material things.
The joy of knowledge and learning has been replaced by burdensome loads of books, stress and anxiety to perform better. Longevity has improved—but what kind of longer lives are these? Lives prolonged by chemicals, lives exposed to HIV virus, smoke, smog and pollution; lives on tenterhooks threatened by crimes and insecurity that lurk around the corners.
It is time for introspection. Perhaps our lives arc longer but certainly not better than what our forefathers lived.
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It can’t be denied that the world has progressed in all spheres of life by leaps and bounds. Our life, these days, is certainly more comfortable than that of our forefathers . And yet, the question is we happier than them? A comparison the life at the time of our forefathers and the life as it is lived today will, undoubtedly, raise the mystery-curtain.
In the by-gone days, our forefathers had to travel on foot for long distances, or used the bullock-carts for this purpose; therefore, communication and personal contact between People of different villages was very limited. But now the situation is absolutely changed. Today, we have the most sophisticated means of transport and communication.
We can travel long distances not only on land by means of a motor car or a bus but over the sea in ships and through the air in aeroplanes. The barriers of distance, high mountains or long stretches of deep water, have lost their importance. We can converse with our friends and relatives anywhere in the world using telephone, telegraph, fax, e-mail, or internet.
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We have strong, sturdy, comfortable houses in which we live in, whereas, our ancestors lived in mud houses, which were, of course, naturally, warm in winter and cool in summer. However, they were airless and far less comfortable than modern houses. They also tended to collapse and dissolve during the rainy season.
We have amenities like the refrigerator to preserve and cool perishable food stuffs. We have all kinds of electrical gadgets to help us swiftly complete our work with ease and speed. The washing machine, the dish washer, the vacuum cleaner, the mixer-grinder, the micro-wave oven and so on have all been designed to help the housewife complete her work in the shortest possible time. Our ancestors could not even dream of such highly useful appliances.
And to keep us joyfully busy during our leisure-time, we have the television and video to entertain us, if we do not have inclination to go to a cinema show. We can pursue hobbies, like photography, which again was unknown to our ancestors.
The highly sophisticated inventions at our disposal today would seem like miracles to our forefathers. The progress & medicine has increased our life-span and conquered the most devastating diseases like smallpox, cholera, polio and tuberculosis, which were considered fatal in earlier times.
We have the most remarkable machinery such as the CAT scan, electro cardio-gram and so on to check-up the organs of the human body. The x-ray gives an accurate photograph of any internal part of the body. Progress in technology has given us the best of roads, bridges, cars, buses, trains, aeroplanes and contributed a lot to the industrial development. All this was missing in ancient times.
Our entire life-style has undergone a complete transformation. Even the position of women is very different now. They are no longer confined to the four walls of the home but work shoulder to shoulder with men. Art and culture are now highly developed. In fact, no aspect of life has remained untouched these days by modernization.
But the tragedy is that in spite of all this progress, happiness and contentment are still eluding us. We have lost peace of the mind, contentment and tranquility that was the hall-mark of life of our ancestors. They had to labour for their food and shelter. They had to endure the hardships brought on by unpredictable, hard weather conditions but managed it all beautifully.
They had never seen the modern world of today, yet they were content with the little that they had. They thanked God for the bread they ate only with an onion or a green chili, and the shelter they had over their heads. Not for them was the selfish, capitalist rat-race of making money. Today, we have everything that life can offer, but the world:
“Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light
Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help from pain.”
Our ancestors were indeed, far happier than we are in the present-day world.
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WE LIVE LONGER THAN OUR FOREFATHERS; BUT WE SUFFER MORE FROM A THOUSAND ARTIFICIAL ANXIETIES AND CARE’S THEY FATIGUED ONLY THE MUSCLES , WE EXHAUST THE FINER STRENGTH OF THE NERVES- EDWARD GEORGE
Turning the annals of history back to ancient times, a modern man feels overwhelmed to see the challenging lives of human beings a few generations earlier. Our predecessors used to live in caves, consume uncooked food, travel thousands of miles on foot. They couldn’t get clothing to cover their bodies, and they didn’t care about finding shelter to cover their heads. Their quality of living was no different than that of beasts. Yet they were satisfied.
Scientific advancement has equipped us with many luxuries that were unprecedented throughout the days of our forefathers. A modern man pleasures himself in numerous ways. We have overcome the elements of nature, we have tamed the atom, we have reached the moon, we have conquered space, and yet we are not complete, content or fulfilled.
At the expense of moral and ethical principles, we have acquired physiological convenience. We dream of comforts of our own, not of others. We’re so engrossed in the capital snare. We are wasteful, lazy, depressed, angry and susceptible to all manner of indulgences. We have so many expectations that dissatisfaction and despair fill life. We have no recreation, no rest, no harmony and no joy
Humanity today arrogant, hypocritical, deceptive, disingenuous and irritated today. ⠀
A dividing line should be drawn between warmth, convenience, ease, and true happiness. With the so-called marvellous gifts of scientific life, no doubt, it has become very comfortable; the universe has just about transformed into a supposed utopia, but satisfaction is a state of consciousness. It does not lie in the warmth and ease of items. All these so-called amenities and miracles of life have made our lives artificial, hollow and devoid of true happiness.
Our forefathers unquestionably had no other accommodations and facilities. In the field of sanitation, they have had numerous deadly illnesses, epidemics and negligence. There have been little higher education and vocational training in schools, colleges, institutions of higher education, but at the same time, they have not suffered from the many ills and evils of contemporary civilization. They were transparent, frank, compassionate, concerned, pitying, polite and sensitive. They had their soul and in all their actions and thought were they always motivated by ethical, spiritual and human ideologies. They had their inner harmony, pleasure and actualization. In the domain of materialism and possession, a modern man lives.
Our inner and true selves are starving and hardened. The human ideals like love, empathy, emotion, fellowship, kindness etc. have increasingly been marginalised in this world of scientific advancement. Man is becoming increasingly egoistic and too money-minded.What is the use of possession of the universe the spirit is abandoned? King Midas’ curse has come down on the human race. The exploitation of knowledge has turned our future into a bitter one. our existence is dehumanised and disillusioned.
Everything that has been stated so far actively demonstrates that our ancestors were much happier than ourselves.
they really enjoyed in the past than we do now
it is really a fact that our forefathers were happier than us. in the times of our forefathers life was so simple. science was not so advanced and con...
they really enjoyed in the past
My name is Anaisa Arora, I have taken part in many national and international competitions. I have a passion for debating and writing . i have a wish for a voice of a youth to share thier opinions as well , after all we are the generation that is going to take on the world now.....
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1. The conquest of happiness has meant different facts to different generations. Our forefathers took pride in scholarship, a spirit of sacrifice and solicitude for the welfare of others. Gone are those days. Today we live only for ourselves. We are jealous of the advancement of our neighbours. We end up tense and unhappy. 2. The term 'happy' has a variety of meanings. It stands for the lucky, fortunate, content, glad or apt. Happiness lies withing the mind of the individual. No amount of external wealth may be helpful in making him happy. 3. Our forefathers had life styles, very much different from those we have today. Their life was bases mainly on the concept of "Simple living and high thinking". People were satisfied with whatever they obtained after working hard. Excessive material wealth did not mean much for them. They derived mental satisfaction and enrichment which they aimed at. 4. The structural framework of our forefathers families was different from those of ours. They lived in a cohesive joint family structure where they were happier than we. They cared for one another. The siblings grew up with their cousins. The bond of love which they shared can not be easily found in the nuclear family of the day. The family provided an emotional cushioning effect against tension and stress. 5. However, in the nuclear family, we are detached from the feelings towards our kith and kin. At times even the cousins do not recognize one another, when they happen to be self-centered. Disputes in the family may lead to divisions. This may finally destroy the family psyche. 6. But today we are happy only if we attain our coveted material ends. We are ready to resort to any means to achieve that end. Our philosophy of life has turned out totally Machiavellian. 7. Our forefathers had a vision to make India the best. To attain their ambitions, they were ready to make all sorts of personal scarifies. Their happiness lay in that of the millions of Indian brothers and sisters. 8. On the other hand, today people are ready to migrate to the west, to enjoy a comfortable life. They run away from the evils of the Indian society without trying to remedy them. Often they become successful in foreign lands. But in the process, they become alienated from their motherland. The nostalgic feeling of their childhood and the relationship they left remained which cannot make them happy. Distance from their ailing parents is a worrying factor and keeps them disturbed. It is not easy for them to return, as their children will not be able to adjust to the Indian environment and the way of life.
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‘were our forefathers happier than us’ essay by 11 year old bookosmian from chennai.
Our forefathers did not have any cures for treating diseases so they lost a lot of loved ones. But nowadays, we have doctors and medical professionals who help us from diseases like the way the vaccination for COVID-19 has been created.
We have technology and gadgets which takes us away from experiencing life outside technology. Our forefathers had a lot of fun in life as they played many outdoor games and met people in real life, not virtually.
In the days of the pandemic, we have started realizing now that we should have spent more time with friends and family. We regret not using the time we had, to explore, travel and have fun.
Our forefathers were happier than us because they breathed clean air. Nowadays, there is a lot of pollution which harms the ozone layer.
But it is wrong to think only negative of technology. Thanks to technology, we get to study virtually and keep in touch with our teachers and classmates, something that was not there in the old days.
An advantage for us is, thanks to history, we can understand our forefather’s mistakes and learn from them. Understanding what our forefathers went through helps us see patterns that might otherwise be invisible in the present.
We all have our own opinions on this. My viewpoint is that our forefathers were happier than us.
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This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Lisa Speroni. It has been edited for length and clarity.
I quit my government job in January 2022, two months after returning from a European vacation with my son, Ryan. I was about to turn 55.
"Are you crazy?" a coworker asked. "Have you thought this through?" they said. I lost count of the people who said I'd lose a big chunk of my pension if I didn't retire at 65 .
"I know," I replied. "But this life isn't for me anymore, and I'm moving to Italy."
If I could have suffered through the next 10 years, I'd have qualified for a pension until death that was 90% of my $110,000 salary.
Still, money isn't everything. The thought of staying in the rat race until 2032 was appalling. I was an IT project manager in the social-services department of the state of California. It meant being on call 24/7. If there was an emergency at 2 a.m., I'd get a text.
My son and I hadn't fared well during COVID either. We rented an apartment in downtown Sacramento , which used to be bustling. Then, everyone started working from home. It was dead, and I didn't feel safe.
Ryan's dad, from whom I'm divorced, is Italian but was born in the US. Ryan qualified for Italian citizenship if he wanted to apply for it.
He got excited about learning the language and signed up for the Tandem app , where people of different nationalities teach each other. Before long, he arranged to visit some friends he'd met on the app in Florence.
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Ryan, who runs a niche menswear company , went for two months in the summer of 2021. He said I'd love the place. I flew to the city for a two-week vacation. The experience changed everything.
I enjoy watercolor painting, and the art, architecture, and laid-back café society blew me away. I toured the Uffizi galleries with an art-history professor from a university near Florence. I gazed at the statue of Medusa in the main square.
My return was depressing. When we left the airplane, we had to wear masks because the air was thick with smoke from the raging wildfires at the time .
I felt stifled — physically and metaphorically. Whenever I did a Zoom call with Ryan in Italy, he'd say, "Are you OK, Mom? You don't look well." It was a combination of health problems — I'd been plagued by gastrointestinal issues for years, needing 30 surgeries — and the fear of going into debt.
Even though I was earning six figures, I got medical bills stamped "past due." My car needed $1,000 in repairs, which I put on my credit card, which charged 22% interest.
My parents sometimes helped me out because I was struggling to afford gas and my $2,400 rent plus utilities. Groceries were five times as expensive as in Italy, and I had no savings.
One day, I started crying on a Zoom with Ryan, then 26. "I don't want to stay here anymore," I said. We went back and forth about the decision, writing the pros and cons of moving to Italy. The only con was missing my folks. But Mom told me to go for it. "You're at the time of your life when you deserve adventure," she said.
We sold our stuff or put it in storage. The paperwork in Italy was complicated, especially getting Ryan's citizenship. I qualified for a visa as a close family member.
We flew to Italy many times, visiting different areas to decide where to settle. Turin was a possibility in the north. Then, a friend introduced us to Salerno on the Amalfi Coast . We fell in love with this little city on the sea and permanently moved in August 2023. Our spacious, two-bedroom apartment costs $800 a month, and we can eat good, fresh food for just $10 a day.
Ryan and I think nothing of traveling to Rome to stay for a few days. We don't have a car, which is our preference. I've lost 50 pounds, mostly by walking. I chalk up as many as 20,000 steps a day.
Meanwhile, one of my favorite activities is people-watching. Families of all generations — babies and toddlers to 90-year-olds — stroll along the streets. After sunset, they go in together for dinner. It's common for adult children to live with their parents, so our situation isn't unusual.
As for my finances, I get a California pension that's about $25,000 less than the annual amount I'd have received at 65. I don't care about that. I finally have savings and so much less stress.
Do you have an interesting story about retiring outside your native country that you'd like to share with Business Insider? Please send details to [email protected] .
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Americans’ struggle with mental health.
We explore why rates of anxiety and depression are higher than they were before the pandemic.
By Ellen Barry
I cover mental health.
It is no mystery why rates of anxiety and depression in the United States climbed in 2020, at the height of the pandemic. But then life began a slow return to normal. Why haven’t rates of distress returned to normal, too?
Self-reported anxiety and depression have declined from the peak they reached in November 2020, when 42.6 percent of adults said they had symptoms, according to the Household Pulse Survey, a Census Bureau tool that measures well-being. Since then, that figure has declined to 20.7 percent. That’s still double the 11 percent of Americans who said the same thing before the pandemic.
In today’s newsletter, I’ll explain why. Researchers say a big reason for this stubbornly elevated distress is young people, whose low mood was not linked to the pandemic.
The share of young adults reporting anxiety and depression had been rising for about a decade before Covid struck. That continued throughout the pandemic — and did not ease as quickly when vaccines became available.
This is likely because their symptoms were tied to problems other than the virus, like economic precarity, the housing crisis, social isolation and political turmoil, said Emma Adam, a psychologist at Northwestern. “There’s so many things affecting adolescents and young adults that are about uncertainty with their future,” Adam said. “And that hasn’t changed.”
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Below we have given a long essay on Are We Happier Than Our Forefathers of 500 words is helpful for classes 7, 8, 9, and 10 and Competitive Exam Aspirants. This long essay on the topic is suitable for students of class 7 to class 10, and also for competitive exam aspirants. We have not to misunderstand 'pleasure' with 'happiness'.
9. they didn't have to worry about things like climate change or global warming daily. 10. Overall, our forefathers had a much simpler and happier existence than we do today. Some people believe that we are happier than our forefathers. Others hold a view contrary to this one.It is true that in certain respects our.
On account of worries, tension, over-excitement, and the absence of physical labor, we do not get sound sleep at night. We do not have peace of mind which is an essential condition of happiness. As against this, our forefathers lived a simple life. They had fewer wants which they satisfied by working hard. They had sound sleep at night.
Are We Happier Than Our Forefathers? If we are to judge happiness in terms of ease of living, the answer to the question would undoubtedly be "yes" : no one can deny. Modern science has achieved so much to lighten our day-to-day jobs that if our forefathers were to return today, they would not recognize the conditions as belonging to the ...
On the other hand, our forefathers were nearer to nature and could invoke the blessings of God. They were amidst the ancient tradition. As such, on that score, they were happier than us. The human qualities that were prevalent in the times of our forefathers are conspicuously absent today. They were, therefore, happier and more peaceful than Hs ...
100 Words Essay On Are We Happier Than Our Forefathers In English. This is a question that is being put up by many. There are a lot of critique openings as well" to this very question. However, It can be said that life has gotten so much easier than the life of our forefathers. The technology has made it an even easier task. In today's ...
by FatherResource Team. We are both better and worse than our forefathers. Our forefathers worked hard to achieve the simplest things, yet they were much happier. We depend on machinery to do our work, live much longer lives than our forefathers, and make use of luxuries our forefathers did not have, yet we are unhappy.
If happiness is not concerned with material benefits and luxuries, certainly our forefathers were happier, rather far happier than us. Our forefathers were contented with their lot. Their means for progress and enjoyment of material luxuries were greatly limited. They lived in simple houses made of straw and mud or simple brick, stone, and logs ...
Essay On Are We Happier Than Our Forefathers. To deal with this subject one e must first understand what 'happiness' means. We have not to misunderstand 'pleasure' with 'happiness'. A lavish life style, a rich home a big lay treated bungalow and a luxurious s car these are today as the means of 'happiness'.
Are we Happier Than Our Forefathers? "Happiness depends on what you can give not what you can get." -Mahatma Gandhi . Turning back the pages of history to ancient times, a modern man feels wonderstruck to see the hard life of human beings a few centuries ago.
As your contrition to a debate, write arguments for or against the proposition. "We are happier than our fore-father". Mr. Chairman, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen, I rise at this august occasion to propose the motion which states: We are happier than our fore-fathers", We are the present generation of men and women while our fore ...
Are we any happier than our forefathers? Modern life has become synonymous with requiring more, consuming more, and destroying more. The quality of life has deteriorated and has become starved of human values.
And yet, the question is we happier than them? A comparison the life at the time of our forefathers and the life as it is lived today will, undoubtedly, raise the mystery-curtain. In the by-gone days, our forefathers had to travel on foot for long distances, or used the bullock-carts for this purpose; therefore, communication and personal ...
There are many reasons why we might be happier than our forefathers. We have more and better technology, which can make our lives easier and more enjoyable. We have more knowledge about how to live happy and healthy lives. We live in more democratic societies, which can protect our basic rights and give us a say in how we are governed.
Hey guys! welcome to yes classes. This is the second part of debate writing. In this video, we will cover an important topic "Are we happier than our forefat...
It does not lie in the warmth and ease of items. All these so-called amenities and miracles of life have made our lives artificial, hollow and devoid of true happiness. Our forefathers ...
We end up tense and unhappy.2. The term 'happy' has a variety of meanings. It stands for the lucky, fortunate, content, glad or apt. Happiness lies withing the mind of the individual. No amount of external wealth may be helpful in making him happy.3. Our forefathers had life styles, very much different from those we have today.
And yet, the question is we happier than them? A comparison the life at the time of our forefathers and the life as it is lived today will, undoubtedly, raise the mystery-curtain. In the by-gone days, our forefathers had to travel on foot for long distances, or used the bullock-carts for this purpose; therefore, communication and personal ...
Our forefathers were happier than us because they breathed clean air. Nowadays, there is a lot of pollution which harms the ozone layer. But it is wrong to think only negative of technology. Thanks to technology, we get to study virtually and keep in touch with our teachers and classmates, something that was not there in the old days.
Our forefathers were happy to have a single television in the entire neighborhood. We are physically better than our ancestors due to improved lifestyle and nutrition. But spiritually we aren't happy. Mentally we are running in a race of millions. Conclusion: In terms of technology, yes we are happy. But in terms of peace, we are not.
Now we live our lives in a manner that our forefathers did not. If our forefathers could see the life we live now, they would be very disappointed as we are not as hardworking as they were. They worked day and night to achieve the smallest success. We depend on machinery to do our work and because of that, people nowadays have grown obese and lazy.
Question: As your contribution to a debate, write arguments for or against the proposition: "We are happier than our forefathers". Note before: The above question falls under argumentative essay, so you will present your POV clearly, preferably segmented with one point of view per paragraph.
Click here 👆 to get an answer to your question ️ write a essay on are we happier than our forefathers ... Our life, these days, is certainly more comfortable than that of our forefathers. And yet, the question is we happier than them? A comparison the life at the time of our forefathers and the life as it is lived today will, undoubtedly ...
Ryan, who runs a niche menswear company, went for two months in the summer of 2021.He said I'd love the place. I flew to the city for a two-week vacation. The experience changed everything. I ...
Noticing joy can be a guiding force, helping us name what matters in our lives. Joy, Oliver suggests, helps us discern what we love, and, just maybe, helps us figure out how we want to live ...
Let's make a commitment to our children and to our future. Let's show them that we care. The expansion of the child tax credit is a crucial step toward a more just and equitable society.
This is likely because their symptoms were tied to problems other than the virus, like economic precarity, the housing crisis, social isolation and political turmoil, said Emma Adam, a ...