Petitions
Petitions have long been a part of British political life. Anyone who wanted to change something would get a list of signatures from people who agreed to the idea and either send them to the government or deliver them personally to the Prime Minister's house in London.
They are always accepted at the door by one of the PM'S officials. What happens then? Nothing much, usually. But petitions have always been thought of as a useful way for those who govern to find out what the people really think.
That's why the UK government launched its "e. petition" site in November 2006. Instead of physically collecting signatures, all anyone with an idea has to do now is to make a proposal on the government website, and anyone who supports the idea is free to add his or her signature.
The petitions soon started to flow in. The idea was for the British people to express their constructive ideas. Many chose instead to express their sense of humor.
One petitioner called on Tony Blair to “stop the Deputy Prime Minister eating so much”. Another wanted to expel(驱逐)Scotland from the United Kingdom because Scottish football fans never support England In the World Cup.
Other petitioners called on the Prime Minister to abolish the monarchy. Some wanted to give it more power. Some wanted to oppose the United States. Others wanted to leave the European Union. Some wanted to send more troops to lraq and others wanted them all brought home. Some wanted to adopt the euro(欧元). Others wanted to keep the pound.
Yet if some petitions are not serious, others present a direct challenge to government policy. A petition calling on the government to drop plans to charge drivers for using roads has already drawn around l8 million signatures. In response to that, a rival petition has been posted in support of road pricing. And that is also rapidly growing.
There are about 60 million people in Britain. So it is understandable that the government wants to find out what people are thinking. But the problem with the e-petition site seems to be that the British people have about 70 million opinions, and want the Prime Minister to hear all of them. Perhaps he could start a petition asking everyone to just shut up for a while.
16 A petition needs to be signed.
A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned
第1题
A.团体健康保险核保人员通常会以投保团体中所有被保险人的平均年龄作为风险评估指标
B.某团体投保团体意外医疗保险时,核保人员无需考虑团体中的性别比例
C.团体所在的地理位置不会影响核保决定
D.团体的参保比例不会影响核保决定
第2题
A.投保单是核保信息的重要来源
B.投保人或被保险人的告知、声明不能作为评估风险的重要依据
C.代理人报告书是核保信息的重要来源
D.体检报告书是核保信息的重要来源
第3题
A.团体保险核保主要考察团体中少部分非健康成员造成的理赔经验上的不利影响
B.团体保险核保关注投保团体的合规性和保单设计
C.团体保险核保的年度连续性较强
D.理赔记录是决定团体保险费率的关键因素
第4题
A.①②③
B.①②③④
C.①②
D.①③
第5题
A.①②③
B.①②③④
C.①②
D.①③
第6题
第7题
A.校友会、同乡会等民间团体,如果在投保团体医疗保险时无一定资质,但人员数量相对稳定,一般会按标准团体予以承保
B.对于人员数量低于50人的小团体,核保人员一般会要求提供每位成员的健康保险可保性证明
C.购买团体健康保险时,如果个人缴费比例过低可能会导致逆选择风险的增加
D.团体成员的流动性会影响团体健康保险中观察期的长短
第8题
在保险核保信息的来源中,属于核保第一手资料的是()。
A.投保人所作的口头陈述
B.通过实际查勘获取的信息
C.销售人员和投保人提供的情况
D.投保人填写的投保单
第9题
保险核保信息的来源中,核保的第一手资料为()。
A.投保人所作的口头陈述
B.通过实际查勘获取的信息
C.销售人员和投保人提供的情况
D.投保人填写的投保单
第10题
A.①②③
B.①③④
C.②③④
D.①②③④
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