Middle East Has the Presence of Oil
For the U.S. and other Western powers, oil supplies are the only real interest in the Middle East, and most people in the region are well aware of this fact, and of numerous Western attempts to establish and support ‘friendly' authoritarian regimes like that of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt and the monarchy in Jordan. Public opinion polls in Turkey, Egypt, Morocco, Jordan and Pakistan actually show majority support for Western political and economic ideas, including democracy, but opposed U.S. foreign policy in general because they believed it to be motivated by control over oil supplies. None of this is new, and the West has been pursuing such policies since the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after World War I, when Britain and France divided up the region between them. After World War II, the U.S. stepped in the void as these older empires declined, although it faced considerable resistance from nationalist movements in both oil and non-oil Arab countries.
Comparison of Religious Ethics Throughout Denominations of Religious Doctrines
The three religions critiqued and reviewed in this paper are Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam. The point of the paper is to compare the ethical values and considerations of those three. In the process the paper highlights each faith's ethical values based on the literature. While there is a great deal of contrast between the three, there also are many similarities in terms of how life should be led and how ethical believers should be.
Geography midterm examination topics and study guide
This paper answers 5 definition questions and 2 short essay questsions for a geography midterm. The terms defined are as follows: loess, glasnost, Cyrillic alphabet, tsars, and laissez faire. The first short essay discusses religion in contemporary Europe, in terms of the rise of secularism, the fall of the Soviet Union, and Muslim immigration. The second essay discusses microstates in Europe by focusing on Andorra, Liechtenstein, and Vatican City.