英语精读1

于冰,张莹,张恒,崔永光,韩春侠

目录

  • 1 精读课程导读
    • 1.1 如何学好精读课?
    • 1.2 Asking the right questions
    • 1.3 思维误区与批判式思维
  • 2 Unit 1  Half  a day
    • 2.1 课文导读-形式:小说的人类进化图;Setting&Theme
    • 2.2 Define yourself
    • 2.3 课文音频+课文文本
    • 2.4 单词讲解
    • 2.5 To Make a living or make a Life,that is a question.
    • 2.6 Rip van winkle(children’s poetry)
    • 2.7 Rip van winkle
    • 2.8 Overcoming your inner voice
    • 2.9 Further Reading
    • 2.10 拓展视频学习
    • 2.11 词语辨析练习&翻译练习
    • 2.12 优秀习作
    • 2.13 章节测试
  • 3 Unit 3 Message of the land
    • 3.1 课文导读--Inference:How to read between the lines?
    • 3.2 课文音频
    • 3.3 课前讨论
    • 3.4 课文重点
    • 3.5 Urbanization
    • 3.6 34 Unforgettable Photos Of China’s Massive, Uninhabited Ghost Cities
    • 3.7 Left behind children in China
    • 3.8 Isolated and abandoned the heartbreaking reality of old age in rural China
    • 3.9 NEGLECTED ELDERLY PEOPLE IN CHINA
    • 3.10 Belonging:Home away from home
    • 3.11 chez moi
    • 3.12 China’s ‘Kingdom of Daughters’ draws tourists
    • 3.13 Naxi Minority-Mosuo people
    • 3.14 China celebrates the ‘kingdom of women’
    • 3.15 章节主题presentation
    • 3.16 拓展视频学习
    • 3.17 章节测试
  • 4 Unit 4 The Green Banana
    • 4.1 课文导读
    • 4.2 课文音频
    • 4.3 三人行,必有我师焉。择其善者而从之 ,其不善者而改之。
    • 4.4 Discuss the topics below with a partner
    • 4.5 Online Investigation
    • 4.6 Listen and answer the questions
    • 4.7 Learning moments
    • 4.8 Life-Changing Events That Can Shake Us To Our Core
    • 4.9 Ethnocentrism
    • 4.10 White Supremacy
    • 4.11 However the election ends, white supremacy has already won
    • 4.12 尺有所长寸有所短
    • 4.13 A Debate
    • 4.14 New England-Beacon of light
    • 4.15 拓展视频
    • 4.16 章节测试
  • 5 The kindness of strangers
    • 5.1 课文导读---critical thinking
    • 5.2 课文音频
    • 5.3 课后练习
    • 5.4 Listening---trust or believe?
    • 5.5 Speech on Importance of Trust
    • 5.6 The Importance of Trust
    • 5.7 who do you trust
    • 5.8 Staged crash fraud
    • 5.9 5 signs you've been in a staged car crash
    • 5.10 Trust among Chinese 'drops to record low'
    • 5.11 Chinese distrust strangers, lack shared values
    • 5.12 Why Chinese Don’t Smile at Strangers | “In” & “Out” Groups
    • 5.13 How the sharing economy makes us trust complete strangers
    • 5.14 ‘This kindness made my heart sing’
    • 5.15 Compassion Fatigue & Integrity Crisis
    • 5.16 主题presentation
    • 5.17 拓展视频
    • 5.18 章节测试
  • 6 Clearing in the sky
    • 6.1 课文导读
    • 6.2 课文音频
    • 6.3 About Living
    • 6.4 rugged individualism
    • 6.5 Obama: Obamacare "Rugged Individualism That Defines America"
    • 6.6 Herbert Hoover
    • 6.7 Column: U.S. individualism isn’t rugged, it’s toxic — and it’s killing us
    • 6.8 Puritanism
    • 6.9 american farmer
    • 6.10 拓展视频
    • 6.11 作文点评
    • 6.12 电影推荐-Redemption of Shawshank
    • 6.13 章节测试
  • 7 Unit 6 Christmas Day in the morning
    • 7.1 课文导读
    • 7.2 课文音频
    • 7.3 Origin of Christmas
    • 7.4 Christmas vs Spring Festival
    • 7.5 Charles Dickens-A Christmas Carol
    • 7.6 Christianity & its history
    • 7.7 拓展视频
    • 7.8 章节测试
5 signs you've been in a staged car crash

5 signs you've been in a staged car crash

ByBarbara Marquand| Posted on December 3, 2013

Accidents happen, but some car crashes are by design.

Orchestrated by sophisticated criminal networks, staged "accidents" bilk car insurance companies out of billions of dollars, with consumers paying the ultimate price in higher premiums.

They work like this: You're driving along innocently when a car comes out of nowhere, and wham! Before you know what hit you, passengers pile out of other cars complaining of injuries. Strangers urge you to visit a certain clinic or lawyer. Witnesses conveniently appear. And finally the other driver and passengers file large damage and/or injury insurance claims against you for thousands of dollars.

"The money in fake injury claims can be so lucrative, it's hard for organized crime to pass up," says James Quiggle, spokesperson for the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud in Washington, D.C.

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Auto insurance fraud is big business. Prosecutors say a crime ring they broke up this year tried to fleece $400 million from insurers through staged crashes and phony claims in New York City.

The Insurance Information Institute estimated that a typical two-car family in Florida paid an extra $100 a year for car insurance in 2011, effectively a "fraud tax" because of staged accidents and other scams.

California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones and Los Angeles District Attorney Jackie Lacey recently warned Californians to be alert for staged crashes. Last year the Department of Insurance received more than 7,700 suspected auto fraud claims in Los Angeles County alone.

In March the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB) asked drivers in the Las Vegas area to look out for crooks targeting trucks for staged crashes. Some 100 suspected staged crashes along the I-15 corridor were reported to the bureau in the previous 12 to 18 months, and as many as 25 targeted big rigs.

 

 

More recently, Minneapolis-St. Paul has become a hotspot. The NICB reported in January that the rate of organized crime involvement in auto insurance fraud rose 230 percent in Minnesota in the last four years. The Insurance Federation of Minnesota says the increase is due to a crackdown on fraud in other states.

"You start herding the cockroaches around, and they start falling off to new locations," Quiggle says.

Singled out

Nobody is immune from getting targeted in a staged crash.

"Victims run the gamut -- young, old, male and female," says NICB spokesperson Frank Scafidi.

But crooks tend to single out elderly people, women who are alone and drivers of nice cars, he says.

So how can you tell if you've been in a staged crash?

Here are seven red flags:

1. Sudden stops

The "swoop and squat" is the most common staged crash tactic, according to the California Department of Insurance. Traffic flows along smoothly. A car pulls up beside you, so you can't change lanes. Then the driver in front of you slams on the brakes, causing a rear-end collision.

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2. A car comes out of nowhere at an intersection

Swindlers use a couple of different tactics to take advantage of you at intersections. A driver might motion you forward and then slam into you, claiming he never gave you the signal.

Or a driver motions you forward to make a left turn in front of his car. But then as soon as you enter the intersection, he pulls forward, blocking your way, and another car crashes into you.

The "right-turn drive down" tactic happens when you try to make a right turn from a stop sign. A car parked at the curb accelerates forward and hits the rear corner of your car. The driver says you ran the stop sign or pulled in front of him.

3. Pressure to go to certain clinics or attorneys

"Runners" and "cappers" show up at the accident scene and urge you to go to clinics or attorneys that are actually fraudulent. Quiggle says some criminal rings also send people to real accidents to persuade victims to go to their crooked medical and legal professionals.

4. Suddenly, lots of passengers

"Jump-ins" happen when people suddenly appear and jump into other cars, claiming they were passengers. You should also be suspicious if the other driver and passengers say they're injured, despite minor damage to the vehicles.

5. Phony witnesses

You should be suspicious when a witness conveniently appears and backs up everything the other driver says.