Подлежащее+have/has+глагол с окончанием -ed или, если глагол неправильный, то 3-я колонка неправ. глаголов
John hasn't called me recently.
They bought a new car last month.
The teacher hasn't returned the tests yet.
How long has she known about this problem?
Have you ever heard such an unbelievable story?
When I was a child, I lived in England for two years.
Ha has bought me a beautiful gift for my birthday.
I am so excited to have a dog. I have always wanted one.
They went to Venice three years ago.
She feels great. She has lost five kilos since Christmas.
When I came home my brother was watching TV and eating sandwiches.
Yesterday at 5 we were playing football.
While my mother was cooking, I was cleaning in my room.
When you called me, I was doing my homework.
When my mother entered the room, I was reading a book. Извини токо 6 не мог(
The human rights issues created by incarceration are evident, I think: locking people up means taking away a number if not most of their liberties, most obviously their freedom of movement, freedom to work and political freedom in some cases, as well as their physical security and privacy. Other rights violations have to do with the kind of people who are locked up and the often substandard conditions in which many prisoners are kept, even in rich countries such as the U.S.:
Children are often incarceratedFederal prisons in the U.S. hold 60% more prisoners than they were designed forPrisoners often have to perform forced and/or unpaid laborPrison rape is commonIncarceration reduces former inmates’ earnings by 40 percent when compared to demographically similar counterparts who have not been imprisonedChildren of inmates suffer from the absence of a parentIncarceration rates often betray racism in criminal justiceetc.Some people clearly deserve to be put in jail, and often that is what is required and necessary in order to protect the human rights of their (possible) victims. There’s also a deterrent effect: one study has shown that a 10 percent increase in incarceration is associated with two to four percent drop in crime. In the U.S at least, there’s a correlation between soaring incarceration rates (see below) and spectacular drops in crime rates. However, other data point to little or no effect of mass incarceration on crime: