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CoachStarlingPerson237
Hello tutor, can you please help me with an assignment. i Have one…

Hello tutor, can you please help me with an assignment. i Have one favour from you please. After completIng this assignment can you please not post it to public for everyone to see it please. thank you so so much I will really appreciate it. 
 

so we need to read this article and make a one-paragraph summary based on your notes. We need like six or seven sentences

We need to Include:
a clear topic sentence which includes the title, author, attributive/author-tag and main idea.
In “Every Child Needs a Champion,” the speaker, Rita Pierson passionately explains the importance of human connection in education.

a closing sentence
No new ideas or examples
Re-state the main idea, showing the importance or application of the main idea.
 

and also we need to Include the link or photo of your notes below your paragraph. So can you please show me ur notes too, I will really appreciate it. Thank  you so much. 
 

John Baird: The West ignores the plight of Iranian women at its own peril I’ve been glued to the television for over two weeks, watching the scenes from inside Iran. I see brave people facing off against heavily armed security forces. I see young women, most in their 20s, marching with open arms and closed fists towards hordes of faceless men in full riot gear. When they are inevitably smashed down, they get back up and stand tall. The protests were set off when news of the brutal arrest and murder of a 22-year-old woman, Mahsa Amini, began making the rounds on social media. State officials went by the usual Tehran playbook: they dodged responsibility, lied and blamed the victim’s alleged health record. This only served to add more fuel to the rage of the nation, as it here in Canada 20 years ago, when a Canadian woman met a similar fate. In 2003, Iranian-Canadian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi was murdered for trying to expose the brutality of Iran’s theocratic regime. Also called Ziba — Persian for “beautiful” — Kazemi left the safety of her life in Canada to report on the families of political prisoners who had gathered outside the notorious Evin Prison. For this, she was arrested, tortured and raped to death by thugs who now freely walk the earth and enjoy impunity. Kazemi was a beautiful, brave human being, who became the voice of oppressed souls inside Iran. Even though Tehran claimed she had “preexisting conditions,” her death appalled the world and fundamentally altered relations between Canada and Iran. In 2012, in what I can call a significant achievement in my political life, I announced that the Government of Canada would close its embassy in Tehran and kick out all Iranian diplomats over that country’s support for the bloody dictator in Syria, its nuclear ambitions and its atrocious human rights abuses. In an address to the National Council of Resistance of Iran’s annual gathering in Paris in 2016, I said: “The struggle of our generation is the struggle against terrorism. And the regime in Tehran is by far the biggest state sponsor of terrorism in the world.” Ever since, I have tried to commit my time and effort to challenging the rule of the terrorist mullahs, as I consider them the most lethal threat to humanity in our time. This threat is why I, among other colleagues, became a target in 2018, as I wanted to speak out against Tehran at other Iranian resistance gatherings. As Canadians, we have been victims of the Iranian regime’s cruel ideology for many years. Even though we’re separated by great distances, the Iranian regime’s attacks on our way of life and principles has haunted our conscience for far too long. In 2020, the Iranian regime’s Revolutionary Guard Corps shot down Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752, killing 167 passengers onboard, including 57 innocent Canadians. So many talents, so many futures, were taken from us. As the Iranian leadership keeps denying responsibility, western governments, mainly Ottawa, have done little to hold them responsible.

 

 

Iranian state terrorism and the consequential Islamic extremism that have gained momentum since the clerical regime took power in 1979 have claimed many lives and constitutes a major threat to global peace and security. This regime is why we cannot afford to ignore what is happening on Iranian streets. The people of Iran are saying loud and clear that their demands go far beyond freedom of choice for attire. They want regime change. Armed with the most destructive militaries and superior economies, we in the West have failed to intimidate Tehran into changing its behaviour. We’re just too attached to our egos and too dependent on electoral calculations to risk standing up for what is right. By putting their vulnerable lives in harm’s way, the Iranian people are doing something that we have failed to achieve for four decades: they are showing how we should bring an end to a regime that has the dubious distinction of being the most significant state sponsor of terrorism and continues to develop nuclear weapons. Iranians deserve our support and recognition of their right to fight against this brutal regime. As stated in Resolution 1397, which was filed by members of the United States House of Representatives in support of the protests in Iran, we must affirm “the right to self-determination for the Iranian people struggling to establish a democratic, secular and nonnuclear Republic of Iran.” Whether we like it or not, the women in Iran are leading a revolution that will impact our lives for the better. As in every significant historical development, fundamental change requires sacrifice, as it already has in Iran. Further inaction by leaders worldwide will be judged accordingly.