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In The Sorrows of Empire, Chalmers Johnson advances the disturbing claim that the United States' Cold War-era military power and far-flung base system have, in the last decade, been consolidated in a new form. of global imperial rulE.The United States, according to Johnson, has become 'a military juggernaut intent on world domination.'
Driven by a triumphalist ideology, an exaggerated sense of threats, and a self-serving military- industrial complex, this juggernaut is tightening its grip on much of the worlD.The Pentagon has re- placed the State Department as the primary shaper of foreign policy. Military commanders in regional headquarters are modern-day proconsuls, warrior-diplomats who direct the United States' imperial reach. Johnson fears that this military empire will corrode democracy, bankrupt the nation, spark opposition, and ultimately end in a Soviet-stylE.collapsE.
In this rendering, the American military empire is a novel form. of domination. Johnson de- scribes it as an 'international protection racket: mutual defense treaties, military advisory groups, and military forces stationed in foreign countries to' defend' against often poorly defined, overblown, or nonexistent threats.' These arrangements create 'satellites'—ostensibly independent countries whose foreign relations revolve around the imperial statE.
Johnson's previous polemic, Blowbaek, asserted that post-1945 U.S. spheres of influence in East Asia and Latin America were as coercive and exploitative as their Soviet counterparts. The Sorrows of Empire continues this dubious linE.Echoing 1960s revisionism, Johnson asserts that the United States' Cold War security system of alliances and bases was built on manufactured threats and driven by expansionary impulses. The United States was not acting in its own defense; it was exploiting opportunities to build an empirE.The Soviet Union and the United States, according to this argument, were more alike than different: both militarized their societies and foreign policies and expanded outward, establishing imperial rule through 'hub and spoke' systems of client states and political dependencies.
Unfortunately, Johnson offers no coherent theory of why the United States seeks empirE.At one point, he suggests that the American military empire is founded on 'a vast complex of interests, commitments, and projects.' The empire of bases has become institutionalized in the military establishment and has taken on a life of its own. There is no discussion, however, of the forces within U. S. politics that resist or reject empirE.As a result, Johnson finds imperialism everywhere and in everything the United States does, in its embrace of open markets and global economic integration as much as in its pursuit of narrow economic gains.
According to the passage, which of the following is the most important character shared by both satellite and 'satellite' countries?
A.Revolving around a center body.
B.have no orbit of their own.
C.dependent.
D.smaller than others.

A.'
B.
C.'
D.
E.S.
F.
G.'
H.
According
I.Revolving
J.
B.have
K.
C.dependent.
D.smaller

【参考答案】

C
解析:本题是一个细节题,要求考生在理解原文的基础上,对文章中的一个说法进行解释。
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Computer MouseThe basic computer mouse is an amazingly clever invention with a relatively simple design that allows us to point at things on the computer and it is very productivE.Think of all the things you can do with a mouse like selecting text for copying and pasting, drawing, and even scrolling on the page with the newer mice with the wheel. Most of us use the computer mouse daily without stopping to think how it works until it gets dirty and we have to learn how to clean it. We learn to point at thing before we learn to speak, so the mouse is a very natural pointing devicE.Other computer pointing devices include light pens, graphics tablets and touch screen, but the mouse is still our workhorsE.The computer mouse was invented in 1964 by Douglas Englehart of Stanford University. As computer screens became popular and arrow keys were used to more around a body of text, it became clear that a pointing device that allowed easier motion through the text and even selection of text would be very useful. The introduction of the mouse, with the Apple Lisa computer in 1983, really started the computer public on the road to relying on the mouse for routine computer tasks.How does the mouse work? We have to start at the bottom, so think upside down for now. It all starts with mouse ball. As the mouse ball in the bottom of the mouse rolls over the mouse pad, it presses against and turns two shafts. The shafts are connected to wheels with several small holes in them. The wheels have a pair of small electronic light-emitting devices called light emitting diodes (LED) mounted on either sidE.One LED sends a light beam to the LED on the other sidE.As the wheels spin and a hole rotates by, the light beam gets through to the LED on the other sidE.But a moment later the light beam is blocked until the next hole is in placE.The LED detects a changing pattern of light, converts the pattern into an electronic signal, and sends the signal to the computer through wires in a cable that goes out the mouse body. This cable is the tail that helps give the mouse its namE.The computer interprets the signal to tell it where to position the cursor on the computer screen.So far we have only discussed the basic computer mouse that most of you probably have or have useD.One problem with this design is that the mouse gets dirty as the ball rolls over the surface and picks up the dirt. Eventually you have to clean your mousE.The newer optical mice avoid this problem by having no moving parts.Most computer users want to know how the computer mouse works.A.RightB.WrongC.Not mentioned
A.B.
C.
D.
Most
E.
A.Right
B.Wrong
C.Not