Answer:
Explanation:
Thank you for including the cartoon. I doubt even G***gle could have dug it up.
To answer your question, you have to decide what or who the flying object is. I'm not totally sure whose face is on that flying being, but a good guess would be Jackson. In any event, the point of the cartoon is that the cartoonist does not think much of Jackson for initiating the spoils system.
He (the cartoonist) is depicting Jackson as the devil himself for introducing such a system and the people who partake of the spoils are being taken in by the very devil himself. Not only that, at the time, the Federal Government should not be introducing such give away programs. We in this day and age, don't agree. We think the government is acting in the best interest of people when they (the governments at all levels) help.
Athens was wealthy during his childhood, however, it fell, and was defeated by Sparta.
Plato decided not to be a politician when he saw Socrates being put on trial and executed.
Plato founded the "Academy in Athens" the first university, where aristotle another greek philosopher became his student
hope this shelps
American authors <span>John James Audubon</span> and David Abram embraced nature and the individual in their works about frontier life. I think that you can use these two authord as their major works such as ''The Birds of America'' (1)and ''<span>Becoming Animal'' (2) include the issues connected to the environmental problems and individual perception of a person.</span>
1.) England or France was about to enter the war.
<span>2.) </span>Neither side backed down in spite of the terrible losses; very few ran.
Hope this info helps! :)
Answer:
Jean-Paul Marat wrote a radical newspaper naming all citizens that were enemies of the French Revolution.
Explanation:
Jean-Paul Marat, a radical Jacobin, wrote from 1.789 to 1.792 <em>L'Ami du peuple</em> (The Friend of the People), which advocated for lower-class people and had no hesitation to mention name of people considered as "enemies of the Revolution". The newspaper was considered dangerous because writings ignited violence and rebellion within lower-class people and had an enormous influence in events like Women's March on Versailles (October 1.789), the elimination of Monarchy (August 10, 1.792) and the September Massacres (September 2 - 6, 1.792)