2021辽宁GRE考试模拟卷(9).docx
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1、2021辽宁GRE考试模拟卷(9)本卷共分为2大题50小题,作答时间为180分钟,总分100分,60分及格。一、单项选择题(共25题,每题2分。每题的备选项中,只有一个最符合题意) 1.Rights to remember NEW HN, CONNECTICUT One element of this doctrine is what I call Achilles and his heel. September 11th brought upon America, as once upon Achilles, a schizophrenic sense of both exceptional
2、 power and exceptional vulnerability. Never has a superpower seemed so powerful and so vulnerable at the same time. The Bush doctrine asked: How can we use our superpower resources to protect our vulnerability The administration has also radically shifted its emphasis on human rights. In 1941, Frank
3、lin Delano Roosevelt called the allies to arms by painting a vision of the world we were trying to make: a post-war world of four fundamental freedoms: freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom from want, freedom from fear. This framework foreshadowed the post-war human-rights construct-embedd
4、ed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and subsequent international covenants that emphasised comprehensive protection of civil and political rights (freedom of speech and religion), economic, social and cultural rights (freedom from want), and freedom from gross violations and persecution
5、(the Refugee Convention, the Genocide Convention and the Torture Convention). But Bush administration officials have now reprioritised freedom from fear as the number-one freedom we need to preserve. Freedom from fear has become the obsessive watchword of Americas human-rights policy. Witness five f
6、aces of a human-rights policy fixated on freedom from fear. (A) Two core tenets of a post-Watergate world had been that our government does not spy on its citizens, and that American citizens should see what our government is doing. But since September 11th, classification of government documents ha
7、s risen to new heights. The Patriot Act, passed almost without dissent after September 11th, authorises the Defence Department to develop a project to promote something called total information awareness. Under this programme, the government may gather huge amounts of information about citizens with
8、out proving they have done anything wrong. They can access a citizens records-whether telephone, financial, rental, internet, medical, educational or library-without showing any involvement with terrorism. Internet service providers may be forced to produce records based solely on FBI declarations t
9、hat the information is for an anti-terrorism investigation. Many absurdities follow: the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, in a study published in September, reports that 20 American peace activists, including nuns and high-school students, were recently flagged as security threats and detained fo
10、r saying that they were travelling to a rally to protest against military aid to Colombia. The entire high-school wrestling team of Juneau, Alaska, was held up at airports seven times just because one member was the son of a retired Coast Guard officer on the FBI watch-list. (B) After September 11th
11、, 1,200 immigrants were detained, more than 750 on charges based solely on civil immigration violations. The Justice Departments own inspector general called the attorney generals enforcement of immigration laws indiscriminate and haphazard. The Immigration and Naturalisation Service, which formerly
12、 had a mandate for humanitarian relief as well as for border protection, has been converted into an arm of the Department of Homeland Security. The impact on particular groups has been devastating. The number of refugees resettled in America declined from 90,000 a year before September 11th to less
13、than a third that number, 27,000, this year. The Pakistani population of Atlantic County, New Jersey has fallen by half. (C) Some 660 prisoners from 42 countries are being held in Guantanamo Bay, some for nearly two years. Three children are apparently being detained, including a 13-year-old, severa
14、l of the detainees are aged over 70, and one claims to be over 100. Courtrooms are being built to try six detainees, including two British subjects who have been declared eligible for trial by military commission. There have been 32 reported suicide attempts. Yet the administration is literally pour
15、ing concrete around its detention policy, spending another $ 25m on buildings in Guantdnamo that will increase the detention capacity to 1,100. (D) In two cases that are quickly working their way to the Supreme Court, Yasser Hamdi and Jose Padilla are two American citizens on American soil who have
16、been designated as enemy combatants, and who have been accorded no legal channels to assert their rights. The racial disparities in the use of the enemy combatant label are glaring. Contrast, for example, the treatment of Mr Hamdi, from Louisiana but of Saudi Arabian ancestry, with that of John Walk
17、er Lindh, the famous American Taliban, who is a white American from a comfortable family in the San Francisco Bay area. Both are American citizens; both were captured in Afghanistan in late 2.(A) Malcolm sits by the window.(B) Malcolm lives in New York(C) Elsa lives in Florida.(D) Elsa changed her s
18、eat because a man next to her was smoking.(E) Elsas boyfriend and she still live near Spaceport.(F) Malcolm still lives a few miles from Spaceport.(G) Malcolm sold the house and the furniture a few miles from Spaceport and moved to his friends in Florida.(H) Malcolm has move to New York. 3.(11)_suit
19、able for people who like living high upAthe BarbicanBSt Johns WoodCBattersea 4.Rights to remember NEW HN, CONNECTICUT One element of this doctrine is what I call Achilles and his heel. September 11th brought upon America, as once upon Achilles, a schizophrenic sense of both exceptional power and exc
20、eptional vulnerability. Never has a superpower seemed so powerful and so vulnerable at the same time. The Bush doctrine asked: How can we use our superpower resources to protect our vulnerability The administration has also radically shifted its emphasis on human rights. In 1941, Franklin Delano Roo
21、sevelt called the allies to arms by painting a vision of the world we were trying to make: a post-war world of four fundamental freedoms: freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom from want, freedom from fear. This framework foreshadowed the post-war human-rights construct-embedded in the Univ
22、ersal Declaration of Human Rights and subsequent international covenants that emphasised comprehensive protection of civil and political rights (freedom of speech and religion), economic, social and cultural rights (freedom from want), and freedom from gross violations and persecution (the Refugee C
23、onvention, the Genocide Convention and the Torture Convention). But Bush administration officials have now reprioritised freedom from fear as the number-one freedom we need to preserve. Freedom from fear has become the obsessive watchword of Americas human-rights policy. Witness five faces of a huma
24、n-rights policy fixated on freedom from fear. (A) Two core tenets of a post-Watergate world had been that our government does not spy on its citizens, and that American citizens should see what our government is doing. But since September 11th, classification of government documents has risen to new
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