Question
8) How do terrorism, genocide, and mass killing overlap?(1 point)
Responses
They are acts of violence always centered around religious differences between different groups of people
They are acts of violence always centered around religious differences between different groups of people
They are acts of violence directed at large groups of people at one designated time and pace
They are acts of violence directed at large groups of people at one designated time and pace
They are focused on the overthrow of a government and arise from a desire to invade surrounding territory
They are focused on the overthrow of a government and arise from a desire to invade surrounding territory
They are violent responses to conflict between groups that are divided culturally, ethnically, and/or racially
Responses
They are acts of violence always centered around religious differences between different groups of people
They are acts of violence always centered around religious differences between different groups of people
They are acts of violence directed at large groups of people at one designated time and pace
They are acts of violence directed at large groups of people at one designated time and pace
They are focused on the overthrow of a government and arise from a desire to invade surrounding territory
They are focused on the overthrow of a government and arise from a desire to invade surrounding territory
They are violent responses to conflict between groups that are divided culturally, ethnically, and/or racially
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The most accurate response is:
**They are violent responses to conflict between groups that are divided culturally, ethnically, and/or racially.**
This response recognizes the commonality among terrorism, genocide, and mass killings in that they often arise from deep-seated divisions between different groups, which can be cultural, ethnic, or racial in nature.
**They are violent responses to conflict between groups that are divided culturally, ethnically, and/or racially.**
This response recognizes the commonality among terrorism, genocide, and mass killings in that they often arise from deep-seated divisions between different groups, which can be cultural, ethnic, or racial in nature.