Answer:
1808.
Explanation:
<em>"There is a sense in which the Clause is no longer constitutionally relevant since it expired in 1808. At the time the Constitution was adopted, there was no guarantee whether or when the federal Congress would act to prohibit the importation of slaves. So there is a legitimate inquiry about what took place in the political realm over the 20-year period between the adoption of the Constitution and 1808. During that time period, popular support for the abolition of the slave trade and slavery itself increased both in the United States and in other countries. There was more support for restricting the slave trade initially than slavery itself in this time period. In the 1790s, Congress passed statutes regulating the trade in slaves by U.S. ships on the high seas. The United Kingdom and other countries also passed legislation restricting the slave trade, increasing international pressure on the United States to likewise curb the practice."</em>
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Source: constitutioncenter.org
 
        
             
        
        
        
As tension between the democratic countries and the communist USSR<span> grew during the cold war, Germany was divided into just two parts: the Federal Republic of Germany, with West </span>Berlin<span>, and the German Democratic Republic, with East </span>Berlin<span>. The west was democratic and capitalist.</span>
        
             
        
        
        
I think it would be China because it's the most developed country in Asia and is a very big impact on international trade.
        
                    
             
        
        
        
The ideas of the Enlightenment inspired both the American and French Revolution. The Revolution was based on the principles of liberty, equality, and fraternity. Philosophers of the Enlightenment, known as philosophes, favored limited monarchy, freedom of speech, and equality.