Any answers I could choose from?
Answer:
Sakoku (??, "closed country") was the isolationist foreign policy of the Japanese Tokugawa shogunate (aka Bakufu) under which, for a period of over 220 years, relations and trade between Japan and other countries were severely limited, nearly all foreign nationals were barred from entering Japan and common Japanese. From 1633 until 1853, the military governments of Japan enforced a policy of sakoku or 'closed country' which prevented foreigners from entering Japan on penalty of death, and prohibited Japanese citizens from leaving.
Lines of latitude and longitude help you locate places on the Earth's surface with greater accuracy because they are measurements of distance in degrees, which can be converted to miles, nautical miles, etc. Finding the distance, for instance, of a place North of the equator and East of the Prime Meridian can give you an exact location.
Just simply looking at this, I believe that I would be able to see three that <span>Thomas Jefferson's three arguments against Hamilton's financial program that would actually be applicable here in this case.
The ones in bold would be your correct answer:
</span><span>A) Southern states had paid their debts; the other states could do the same.
B) The Constitution did not give the federal government the right to create a national bank.
C) The paying of war debts by the federal government would establish trust in the country.
D) A strong federal government was vital for the nation.
E)Tariffs would hurt Southern farmers.</span>