theme of power
1 .The sheep are important for the pigs because the sheep support them in all the thing they do and the sheep follow
what the pigs say because they are not smart enough as the pigs are.
2. Yes, we need the less intellectual workers because we need that type of workers to support the leaders and do all
the things that the leaders say, and to help in the work area.
3. No, they no don’t have any power because they don’t lead anything; the sheep only follow orders of the leaders.
what the pigs say because they are not smart enough as the pigs are.
2. Yes, we need the less intellectual workers because we need that type of workers to support the leaders and do all
the things that the leaders say, and to help in the work area.
3. No, they no don’t have any power because they don’t lead anything; the sheep only follow orders of the leaders.
theme of violence
1. The kind of violence see in Animal Farm is animals doing a rebellion against humans, they enter in war, animals
attacking and murder other animals, and abuse on animals.
2. One of the tools for violence was the dogs that napoleon used to kill anybody that went against him. Other tools of
violence were used by the humans were guns and other type of weapons against the animals. The animals used their
strength and anything that could be useful in the farm against the humans.
3. The violence in the history keeps growing because the violence is the easier way to gain power and that is what
the animals and humans want more power.
4. Napoleon have all the animals under his control and had a lot of power so he makes the animals to believe that he is a
good guy .
5. I agree that the fight between animals and humans lead to the corruption of the pigs because the pigs were smarter and
they learn how to read and write and use that power to control all the animals in Animal Farm and then the pigs start to act
like humans using beds to sleep and money to trade. The pigs were corrupted by the power.
This quote is important to the theme of violence because they are in war and they have to use violence if they want to
win, but that animal doesn’t want to kill anybody in that time.
attacking and murder other animals, and abuse on animals.
2. One of the tools for violence was the dogs that napoleon used to kill anybody that went against him. Other tools of
violence were used by the humans were guns and other type of weapons against the animals. The animals used their
strength and anything that could be useful in the farm against the humans.
3. The violence in the history keeps growing because the violence is the easier way to gain power and that is what
the animals and humans want more power.
4. Napoleon have all the animals under his control and had a lot of power so he makes the animals to believe that he is a
good guy .
5. I agree that the fight between animals and humans lead to the corruption of the pigs because the pigs were smarter and
they learn how to read and write and use that power to control all the animals in Animal Farm and then the pigs start to act
like humans using beds to sleep and money to trade. The pigs were corrupted by the power.
This quote is important to the theme of violence because they are in war and they have to use violence if they want to
win, but that animal doesn’t want to kill anybody in that time.
animal farm project
Chapter 8-liquor production is a large and profitable industry in the world, especially
in Russia, America, and Germany.
Stills do not make alcohol, but concentrate it instead. Because of this, the beginning of whiskey distillation begins not
with the still, but with the fermentation that precedes it. One of the key elements separating different types of whiskeys
is the recipe of grains used in creating a mash for fermenting and the production of base alcohol.
Whiskey distillation takes advantage of the fact that alcohol has a lower boiling point than water. At sea level, water
boils at 212 degrees F, while alcohol boils at 172 degrees F. Therefore, if the fluid from the finished grain mash is placed
in a pot and heated to between 172º F and 212º F, the alcohol will boil away and leave the water and other substances behind.
The vapor rises out of the boiling pot and into either a coil or a second pot, where it is cooled and condensed into a more concentrated
alcohol liquid.
Classic whiskey stills are made of copper, because of the metal's even heating properties. They are built using the simple
pot still design, which uses two connected vessels, one for boiling and one for condensing.
Summary whiskey still history
Moonshining began very early in American history because of government control of the alcohol trade. Shortly after the
Revolution, the United States found itself struggling to pay for the expense of fighting a long war. The solution was to place
a federal tax on liquors and spirits. The American people, who had just fought a war to get out from under oppressive British
taxes (among other purposes), were not particularly pleased. So they decided to just keep on making their own whisky,
completely ignoring the federal tax.
For these early moonshiners, making and selling alcohol wasn't a hobby or a way to make extra cash -- it was how they
survived. Farmers could survive a bad year by turning their corn into profitable whisky, and the extra income made a harsh
frontier existence almost bearable.
In the early 1900s, states began passing laws that banned alcohol sales and consumption. In 1920, nationwide Prohibition
went into effect. It was the greatest thing the moonshiners could have asked for.
Suddenly, there was no legal alcohol available. The demand for moonshine shot up like a rocket. Moonshiners couldn't
keep up with the demand, which led to cheaper, sugar-based moonshine, as well as watered-down moonshine. The distillers
would do anything to increase their profit. Organized crime blossomed as speakeasies opened in every city -- these
secret saloons had hidden doors, passwords and escape routes in case the "Feds" ever showed up to conduct a raid.
When Prohibition was repealed in 1933, the market for moonshine grew thin. Although moonshine continued to be a problem for
federal authorities into the 1960s and '70s, today, very few illegal alcohol cases are heard in the courts. Large commercial distilleries
can buy raw materials on such a large scale that, even with the taxes they must pay, their products aren't too much more expensive than
moonshine. While some counties in the south and Midwest United States remained "dry" (alcohol-free) for decades after the end of national
Prohibition, even those localized liquor bans have, for the most part, faded away. That leaves consumers of alcohol little reason to seek out
moonshine other than the temptation of buying and drinking something that's "forbidden" and the flouting of government authority. The desire
to flout government authority is one of the reasons moonshining exists in the first place.