English
English, 05.10.2019 00:30, dukkchild666

Read the two passages from a raisin in the sun.
passage 1:
lindner: well—you see our community is made up of people who've worked hard as the dickens for years to build up that little community. they're not rich and fancy people; just hard-working, honest people who don't really have much but those little homes and a dream of the kind of community they want to raise their children in. now, i don't say we are perfect and there is a lot wrong in some of the things they want. but you've got to admit that a man, right or wrong, has the right to want to have the neighborhood he lives in a certain kind of way. and at the moment the overwhelming majority of our people out there feel that people get along better, take more of a common interest in the life of the community, when they share a common background. i want you to believe me when i tell you that race prejudice simply doesn't enter into it. it is a matter of the people of clybourne park believing, rightly or wrongly, as i say, that for the happiness of all concerned that our negro families are happier when they live in their own communities.
beneatha (with a grand and bitter gesture): this, friends, is the welcoming committee!
walter (dumfounded, looking at lindner): is this what you came marching all the way over here to tell us?
lindner: well, now we've been having a fine conversation. i hope you'll hear me all the way through—
walter (tightly): go ahead, man.

passage 2:
lindner (putting on his glasses and drawing a form out of the briefcase): our association is prepared, through the collective effort of our people, to buy the house from you at a financial gain to your family.
ruth: lord have mercy, ain't this the living gall!
walter: all right, you through?
lindner: well, i want to give you the exact terms of the financial arrangement— walter: we don't want to hear no exact terms of no arrangements. i want to know if you got any more to tell us 'bout getting together?
lindner (taking off his glasses): well—i don't suppose that you feel . .
walter: never mind how i feel—you got any more to say 'bout how people ought to sit down and talk to each other? . . get out of my house, man. he turns his back and walks to the door
lindner (looking around at the hostile faces and reaching and assembling his hat and briefcase): well—i don't understand why you people are reacting this way. what do you think you are going to gain by moving into a neighborhood where you just aren't wanted and where some elements—well—people can get awful worked up when they feel that their whole way of life and everything they've ever worked for is threatened.
walter: get out.
which quotations from the texts best support the theme that the way to deal with racism is to stand up to it? select three options
“this, friends, is the welcoming committee! ”
“lord have mercy, ain’t this the living gall! ”
“you got any more to say 'bout how people ought to sit down and talk to each other? ”
“get out of my house, man.”
“what do you think you are going to gain by moving into a neighborhood where you just aren’t wanted? ”

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Do you know the correct answer?
Read the two passages from a raisin in the sun.
passage 1:
lindner: well—you see our...

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