问题 问答题

据估计,今天在美国有6000家公司推行“雇员拥有股票计划”,其中包括西尔斯一罗伯克百货公司、美国电话电报公司等。“雇员拥有股票计划”在这些公司的推行,使工人们积极地经营他们的公司,产生了一种充满活力的责任感,在生产率、高质量和低成本等方面取得了巨大的成就。美国争取雇员拥有股票全国委员会对350家高技术公司所作的一项调查发现,利用雇员拥有股票计划的公司要比没有利用这种计划的公司发展快2~4倍。随着这一计划的推行,到2000年,全美国有25%的雇员分享他们公司的所有权。这种迅速出现的“工人资本主义”概念也适用于相当大部分的美国经济。但是工人拥有股票不会轻易转变为工人管理。有的工人股东说:“我看不出有什么变化。一切都和以前一模一样。”也有的工人股东认为,在“雇员拥有股票计划”下,越是尽力干,得到的就越多。(摘自W.E.哈拉尔著的《新资本主义》。)
根据材料请评析工人股东的两种看法。

答案

参考答案:[答案要点]
工人股东的第一种看法主要是从当代资本主义的本质方面来看的,也就是说,当代资本主义社会推行“雇员拥有股票计划”并不改变资本主义社会中资本与雇佣劳动关系的实质。资本与雇佣劳动之间的关系仍然是剥削与被剥削的对立关系。雇员拥有股票,只是说明了在资本主义私有制范围内,资本对雇佣劳动的剥削锁链稍有放松,但不可能改变雇佣劳动者的阶级地位。工人股东的第二种看法,看到了当代资本主义社会出现的新变化,看到了推行“雇员拥有股票计划”对资本主义经济发展的作用,这些作用主要有:使工人积极参与企业的生产管理活动,从而提高企业的生产效率;缓和劳资冲突和社会分配不平等矛盾,有利于资本家的利润得到实现,有利于资本主义经济的稳定发展。但是,这种看法忽视了资本与雇佣劳动之间关系的实质。

单项选择题
单项选择题

That rapscallion who leaps off the monkey bars, landing smack onto an innocent 3-year-old bystander, and skips off, giggling all the while According to a new paper out of Israel, he may not feel all that bad about the incident. The study, conducted by Dr. In bal Kivenson Bar-On at the University of Haifa, shows that high levels of fearlessness in 3-and 4-year-olds is ply associated with aggression and a lack of sympathy. This news will likely surprise risk-loving America, where parents typically beam with pride when their undaunted child mounts the big slide.

Fearlessness is a far-end point on the spectrum of what psychologists call the "approach and withdrawal dimension"—people’s tendency to approach new stimuli (to gain information and acquire new skills ) and withdraw from unfamiliar stimuli (to avoid danger). Striking the right balance is considered crucial to man’s survival. But what about preschoolers’ There’s a clear downside, Dr. Kivenson Bar-On discovered, after she observed lots of preschool play and machinations. In total, she documented 80 children at preschool, home and in the lab, measuring their propensity for fearlessness and other social and emotional characteristics at the beginning and end of one year. Fearlessness was measured by observing reactions to various fright-inducing situations: separation from parents, the roar of a vacuum cleaner, a jack-in-the-box and the like. Those who displayed greater levels of fearlessness, the study found, had no trouble recognizing facial expressions of anger, surprise, happiness and sadness in other children—but they had a hard time identifying fear.

Over all, they were "emotionally shallow" and showed lower levels of sympathy. They took advantage of friends and lacked regret over inappropriate conduct. "These findings," the paper explains, " suggest that fearlessness in preschool constitutes a clear risk factor for developmental pathways that lead to problems in morality, conscience development, and severe antisocial behaviors. " At the same time, fearless children tended to be highly sociable. "One of the most interesting findings was that we could discriminate between friendliness and sympathy," Dr. Kivenson Bar-On said. "These kids are curious, easygoing and friendly, but they have a hard time recognizing emotional distress in others. "

Jamie Ostrov, a psychology professor at the State University at Buffalo who studies aggression, says that children at the extreme end of the fearless spectrurn "may be charming, but they’re also highly manipulative and deceptive and skilled at getting their way—even at age 3 or 4. " It could be that fearless children need per distress cues to active their autonomic nervous systems, limiting their ability to detect distress cues in others. It seems to be, if I’m not worried about this, you can’t be, either. But should we be

As for the result of the research, American parents may be()

A. approving

B. welcome

C. a little unhappy

D. indifferent