Nobody can win a war. People started to make a war thousands years ago. During this time they had different purposes, but the final was the same a war caused a great deal of sorrow. But is it worth fighting? Are there any winners or losers in war? Firstly, both sides get bored with a feud. It makes much money, physical and moral strength. Not only soldiers civilian population gets tired of being in a danger and worrying about relatives and friends. Secondly, the consequences of a war are horrible. Terrible memories would not leave people. Every time they recall those events, they suffer again because no one is able to make somebody happy fighting. Thirdly, a lot of people die
power, they have, to satisfy own ambitions to feel a win's spirit. So they become winners, but it is only formally. On the other hand, there is only one advantage of a war getting some territory or money, but it has much more disadvantages like violence, distraction, houndreds of innocent victims, human's deaths etc. What's more, millions of veterans and their children would remember cruelty, violence and rudeness. In conclusion, I would like to say that war has neither winners nor losers. If somebody wins a war, he is the same loser like those who are not, because he puts himself at the same low moral level as a simple criminal.
It's where the muscles and bones became less efficient as he aged, it stopped his jaw bones from working He speaks through a computer what is on his wheelchair His IQ is 160 His IQ score ranks up with Bill Gates and Benjamin Franklin! Quotes Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change. Life would be tragic if it weren't funny. It is not clear that intelligence has any long-term survival value. People who boast about their I.Q. are losers. My goal is simple. It is a complete understanding of the universe, why it is as it is and why it exists at all. Key events in his life 1977 he was appointed professor of gravitational physics at Cambridge. 1982 he was awarded a CBE by the Queen. 1989 he made a companion of honour. 1998 he publishes Stephen Hawking's Universe: The Cosmos Explained, a book about the basis of our existence and of everything around us. November 2001 he releases Universe in a
of a proposed resolution authorizing military action
against Iraq will come to the Senate floor for debate
next week. Bill Richardson, former U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations, discusses the debate and what weapons
inspectors might face in Iraq. Then, two families with
loved ones in need of kidney transplants seemed to be out
of luck -- until they found each other. We'll share this
amazing story. And with the series debuting left and
right, we'll look at the winners and losers so far this
TV season.
Loe edasi CNN uudisteportaalist.