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*Lời nói đầu của con kịch bản: làm ơn, làm ơn đọc kb và chú thích đàng hoàng

nha =))))) đừng để


t2 thuyết trình ròi tối 11h cn đọc kịch bản là chết cả đám đấy =)))))*

Person1: Now, we shall have a small warm-up exercise called “Hear and see”. What we are going to
do is that I will project some pictures and images onto the screen and your job is to tell me “what do
you see and hear from them?”. For example:

Here, we have an image of a typical Vietnamese market so “Person2” use all your imagination and
tell me what do you see and hear?

Person2: Well, it’s a market so I suppose there’re lots of activities going on right? People selling and
buying things, people riding across the market to see what’s available and probably somewhere, I
suspect we could hear the sound of bargaining and maybe the sound of birds because it’s morning.

Person1: You see, guys? That’s how it works and now is your turn, please keep the description as
clear and precise as possible as we only have 10 minutes in total, so let’s start.

(Mời 1-2 thanh niên lên. P/s: Gọi mấy thằng trí tưởng tượng vươn xa ròi nghiêm túc hông nó trả
lời tầm bây là xog nha =))))) ròi có gì gọi luôn, đỡ mất công chờ)

.
(p/s:
Chọn 1
hay nhiều
tấm thì
hay hơn,
con làm
slide
quyết
định nhe
=)))))

Person2: How about this one?


Person1: Well, can you find any similarities between the pictures?

Yes/no. Actually, they both depict the Amazon rainforest. To be more precise, one is the
Amazon in 2002 and one is the Amazon 20 years later.

Person2: This is the talkshow “Nature in danger”.

Person1: From the earlier images and this one, you have seen it yourself. 20 years ago, the Amazon
covered an area about the size of the lower 48 United States and homed to 16,000 separate trees
species. And yet, bitterly, 20 years later, the forests to the south-east have vanished completely,
resulting in it being no longer a green paradise but a sad reality of the nature.

Person 2: Further and more importantly, though, in 2018 a climate researcher Carlos Nobre and an
environmental researcher Thomas Lovejoy wrote an editorial stating that “If deforestation in the
Amazon goes beyond 20 per cent of its original spread, the 'lungs of the Earth' will have reached the
“point of no return”. In other words, 4% more trees cut down, we are doomed.

(P/s: hình này là gif á, mà trong word nó hông


cđong nên có gì bên slide thêm vào coi nó có
nhảy số hông nha)

https://interactive.pri.org/2018/10/amazon-
carbon/science.html
Person1: But, hey “Person 2”, it makes me wonder, though, humans are able to exert such a
detrimental effect on the largest rainforest of the world, then how about the highest mountain, I
mean the Everest?

Person2: Well, we always say “There’s nothing impossible in the world for the humans” right? And
ironically, the Everest is just another victim alongside the Amazon of that “nothing impossible”.

Person 1: From what I know, thanks to the improved weather forecasting technology and mounting
mountaineering experiences, commercial expeditions to Mt. Everest have mushroomed in recent
years in both Tibet and Nepal.

Person 2: Well, I guess this photo bears out how booming the industry is. Look at it, I can’t believe
we even come across such a traffic jam on the highest mountain in the world. In the end, it is no
longer a wilderness experience, it’s a Mc Donald’s experience. What I’m afraid the most is the
consequences that it has to face afterwards.

Person 1: Each of the climbers generates, on average, around eight kilograms of trash (discarded
empty oxygen canisters, abandoned tents, food containers, and even human feces) which add up to
tons of trash per year, and the
majority of this waste gets left on the
mountain.
2019
vs
2000

Person2: As the result, the melting procedure of the summit’s glaciers accelerates faster and faster,
leaving people fewer sources for drinking and irrigation. What’s more, now snow and ice melt, we
have more problems than ever to concern as the mountain is being directly exposed to the radiant
light.

Person1: The more we talk, the more I feel dejected. I know there is something wrong with the
nature but I never realize how alarming the situation is. Amazon rainforest and Mt Everest are just
some to name, I am convinced that from oceans to valleys, from lows to highs, from the
impoverished to the affluent, the same situation is going on and even worse.

Person2: However, at the heart of the matter, we believe there lies a question: We have so many
laws, rules and standards to ensure our environment’s protection. So why then, the destruction
continues?

Person1: Next, “Nature out of sight, world out of mind” – a small discussion to give you more
insights into humans and nature.
Person2: First of all, based on this chart, can anyone tell us which part of world has the most trash,
and which has the least?

Person1: Then which one do you conclude to have more trash, the developing countries or the
developed ones? _____ If you have the same answer with him/her, please raise your hand. Thank
you. Well, theoretically, you’re right but in reality, all of you have the wrong answer, it’s supposed to
be the developed countries to have far more waste than the developing countries.

Person2: Why is there a contradiction, you ask me? The answer is simple: rich countries have been
exporting trash to poor ones and charts only show us the total of garbage being there at the time
when the data is calculated. In other words, the “origin of trash” factor- whether they are from
developed or developing countries doesn’t affect the results. And rich countries are taking
advantage of it as well as the convenience and cheap price of trash exportation.

India Vietnam

Philippines Indonesia
Person1:
Are these still humans’ home when all I can see is garbage dumping grounds?

Person2: Nature has given us so much, and we owe her a great debt of gratitude. Through her trees,
she gives us life. Through her endless oceans, she gives us freedom. Through her forests, she gives us
peace. Through her beauty, she provides us with a view to never forget.

Person1: Mother-nature gives our planet an indispensable balance. We can use her as a place to be
in our own thoughts; a place to be free. Life is a long gruelling journey. We face many obstacles
along the way. Mother-nature offers a solution to it all. She gives us harmony; a way to be free from
all the world’s problems. We all remember the times when life has been too much for us. When our
bucket is overflowing with issues, and we just don’t know what to do. But no matter what, mother-
nature has always given us a solution.

Person2: And yet, tragically, humans, the ones she nurtures, have poisoned her. After all she has
done for us, mother-nature deserves much better. We need to right our wrongs. We need to cure
the poison we caused; because if we don’t, then we won’t have anyone to shelter, to rely on and to
guide us through life. Is that something you want?

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