What does the following passage reveal about Norma’s view of the world?
“All right, suppose it is?” He looked incredulous. “What would you like to do? Get the button back and push it? Murder someone?”
Norma looked disgusted. "Murder.”
“How would you define it?”
“If you don't even know the person?” Norma said.
Arthur looked astounded. "Are you saying what I think you are?”
“If it's some old Chinese peasant ten thousand miles away? Some diseased native in the Congo?”
“How about a baby boy in Pennsylvania?” Arthur countered. “Some beautiful little girl on the next block?”
“Now you're loading things.”
“The point is, Norma,” he continued, “what's the difference whom you kill? It's still murder.”
“The point is,” Norma broke in, “if it's someone you've never seen in your life and never will see, someone whose death you don't even have to know about, you still wouldn't push the button?
A. She believes that there are some things one should not do for money.
B. She believes people all over the world are essentially the same.
C. She believes some lives are worth more than others.