问题 判断题

软科学是由研究电脑软件发展起来的一门新兴科学技术。( )

答案

参考答案:

解析: 一般地说,软科学是研究社会问题的科学方法,常被人们称为改革社会所必需的一种社会软件。它综合运用自然科学、社会科学和哲学的理论和方法,对复杂的社会课题(人、自然、社会经济、科学技术之间相互作用的政策课题和社会问题)进行预测、规划、管理和评价,从整体上探求最优化的解决方案和决策。因此,此命题错误。

单项选择题 案例分析题

定期定额纳税户"同富居酒店"的老板李某,2005年1月,将酒店承包给张某经营,张某每月向李某交承包费5000元,有关承包经营的事项,李某未向税务机关报告。自2005年1月起该酒店一直未向税务机关申报纳税,税务机关多次催缴无效。2005年5月20日,税务所找到李某,责令其在5月31日前缴纳欠缴的税款10000元,责令期限已过,李某仍未缴纳税款,6月1日经主管税务机关南山区地税分局局长批准,采取税收强制执行措施,但同富居酒店已经在5月底关门停业,张某不知去向,税务机关扣押了李某的小汽车一辆,6月10日小汽车以80000元被拍卖,税务机关将拍卖所得抵顶税款10000元、罚款10000元、滞纳金及各项拍卖费用5000元后,剩余款项于6月20日退还给李某。李某不服,于6月25日向市地税局申请税务行政复议,市地税局复议后维持南山区地税分局的决定。

下列关于税务机关扣押李某小汽车行为的表述中,正确的有()。

A.不应该扣押李某的小汽车,应追究承包人张某的责任

B.税务机关可以扣押李某的小汽车,但不能拍卖

C.税务机关既可以扣押李某的小汽车,也可以依法拍卖其小汽车,以拍卖所得抵顶税款、滞纳金、罚款,但不能抵顶拍卖时发生的费用

D.税务机关既可以扣押李某的小汽车,也可以依法拍卖其小汽车,以拍卖所得抵顶税款、滞纳金、罚款以及扣押、拍卖过程中发生的费用

单项选择题

Real policemen, both Britain and the United States hardly recognize any resemblance between their lives and what they see on TV—if they ever get home in time. There are similarities, of course, but the cops don’t think much of them.

The first difference is that a policeman’s real life revolves round the law. Most of his training is in criminal law. He has to know exactly what actions are crimes and what evidence can be used to prove them in court. He has to know nearly as much law as a professional lawyer, and what is more, he has to apply it on his feet, in the dark and rain, running down an alley after someone he has to talk to.

Little of his time is spent in chatting to scantily clad ladies or in dramatic confrontations with desperate criminal. He will spend most of his working life typing millions of words on thousands of forms about hundreds of sad, unimportant people who are guilty—or not—of stupid, petty crimes.

Most television crime drama is about finding the criminal; as soon as he’s arrested, the story is over. In real life, finding criminals is seldom much of a problem. Except in very serious cases like murders and terrorist attacks—where failure to produce results reflects on the standing of the police—little effort is spent on searching. The police have an elaborate machinery which eventually shows up most wanted men.

Having made an arrest, a detective really starts to work. He has to prove his case in court and to do that he often has to gather a lot of different evidence. Much of this has to be given by people who don’t want to get involved in a court case. So as well as being overworked, a detective has to be out at all hours of the day and night interviewing his witnesses and persuading them, usually against their own best interests, to help him.

A third big difference between the drama detective and the real one is the unpleasant moral twilight in which the real one lives. Detectives are subject to two opposing pressures: first as members of a police force they always have to behave with absolute legality, secondly, as expensive public servants they have to get results. They can hardly ever do both. Most of the time some of them have to break the rules in small ways.

If the detective has to deceive the world, the world often deceives him. Hardly anyone he meets tells him the truth. And this separation the detective feels between himself and the rest of the world is deepened by the simple mindedness—as he sees it—of citizens, social workers, doctors, law makers, and judges, who, instead of stamping out crime punish the criminals less severely in the hope that this will make them reform. The result, detectives feel, is that nine tenths of their work is reaching people who should have stayed behind bars. This makes them rather cynical.

When murders and terrorist attacks occur the police()

A. prefer to wait for the criminal to give himself away

B. spend a lot of effort on trying to track down their man

C. try to make a quick arrest in order to keep up their reputation

D. usually fail to produce results