Imagine for a moment that you are a simple teenager. You wake up in the morning, tired from staying up late the night before. You have to mentally control your body to allow yourself to get out of bed and get ready to go somewhere, and this somewhere is the last place you want to be. You dread spending the entire day in the same building you are in every other day. You basically fall asleep in the shower, in the car and at your desk. You can easily describe yourself in one word: Exhausted. On your way to school you stop for breakfast, you start to realize that the price was a couple of cents higher than it was when you came here for breakfast yesterday morning. “Taxes have to go up again,” you think. After breakfast, you get back in the car and start the engine. You take a deep breath and wonder what would happen if you decided not to go to school today. Your favorite song comes on the radio and you get carried away by the chorus. Decide that going to school is a must. You're distracted until the flashing red and blue lights reflecting in your rearview mirror pull you out of your trance; suddenly you realize that you are about to be stopped. You start to panic and head towards the nearest parking lot. Your hands immediately become diaphoretic. You start to think quickly, but you're not sure where you took a wrong turn. You hear a knock on the window and roll it down. “License and registration,” the officer grumbles in a stern voice. Although you are still completely unaware of what you did wrong, you politely agree. The officer takes them back to his car, and after what seems like an hour, he returns and gives you your belongings back. The officer then asks......middle of paper......t of the United States. Np, nd Web. 07 May 2014.Andrews, Andy. How do you kill 11 million people?: Why the truth matters more than you think. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2011. Print.Johnson, Luke. “Obama Defends NSA Programs, Says Congress Knew About Surveillance.” The Huffington Post. TheHuffingtonPost.com, June 7, 2013. Web. May 4, 2014. King, Martin Luther. Letter from Birmingham Prison. Stamford, CT: Overbrook, 1968. Print.Martin, G. Neil. and G. Neil. Martin. Psychology, 3rd edition: Studying and researching psychology. Harlow: Pearson Allyn & Bacon, 2009. Print "The House Explained." · House.gov. Np, nd Web. May 07, 2014."United States Senate: Senators of the House of Reference Virtual Reference Desk." United States Senate: Senators on the Reference Home Virtual Reference Desk. Np, nd Web. May 7, 2014."WND." Newspaper of the world network. Np, nd Web. April 30. 2014
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