Read the text and choose the correct options
Blackmailing
Some people do not consider blackmailing a [punishment|crime|violence]. A person is not murdered, robbed or even assaulted by it. But what if we say that being blackmailed means [psychological|physical|chemical] abuse?
Of course, it depends on the person being [exercised|excluded|extorted]. If the latter is strong and confident, or if he (or she) knows he has not done anything terrible, he might probably ignore it. It is exceedingly helpful to act with a cold head. But blackmailers usually choose this type of misconduct if their [players|victims|wards] have a sensitive and vulnerable nature. Of course, we are not speaking about [napping|kidding|kidnapping] someone and then extorting their relatives and closest friends. Kidnapping is a serious crime.
We have touched on the issue of torturing a person who does not want his secrets to be cracked. If such people become blackmailed, they usually [enjoy|suffer|torture] from it. They may get serious psychological trauma or be on the verge of suicide. The more urgent this problem becomes if the victims tend to [decorate|distress|expose] themselves. They carry their secrets as a [burden|profit|possession], even what other people consider little things.
That is why for many centuries, philosophers, moral and just kind-hearted people have been[teaching|learning|studying] humanity to treat others as good as they want to be treated themselves. Nobody knows what happens in another person's head, what hardships they have been going through. Blackmailing may become the final straw, and the result may be deplorable. People mostly need mercy instead of pressing them and [laughing|ridiculing|charging] their weaknesses. In Russia, we have a proverb saying: "A word is not a sparrow: you will not catch it if it flies out."