Answer:
Tennessee legislature had passed the Butler Act, which declared unlawful the teaching of any doctrine denying the divine creation of man as taught by the Bible.
Explanation:
Answer:
President Polk
Explanation:
On This Day: President Polk Sparks the California Gold Rush. On Dec. 5, 1848, President James K. Polk confirmed in his State of the Union address that large quantities of gold had been discovered in California
Rio de Janeiro
Maldonado
Río Negro
Bahia Blanca
Buenos Ayres
Banda Oriental
Patagonia
Santa Cruz
Tierra del Fuego
The Falkland Islands
ok that tens i dont know the dates you will have to look that up but
Hope this helps
The answer is A. Because the other answer choices don't really make sense.
Answer:
If WW3 were to happen it would remain as a conventional war without the use of WMDs. The major nuclear powers (US, UK, France, Russia, and China) will do whatever they can to ensure that nukes don’t get used.
At best, it will be a conventional war that has all the participants keep the scope of their military actions limited.
At worst, it goes nuclear and the map gets redrawn in a big way as many national governments cease to exist and their nations collapse. Fortunately we’re no longer capable of wiping ourselves out. A lot of people will die, but it won’t result in the extinction of humanity.
Wars start through any number of pathways: One world war happened through deliberate action, the other was a crisis that spun out of control. In the coming decades, a war might ignite accidentally, such as by two opposing warships trading paint near a reef not even marked on a nautical chart. Or it could slow burn and erupt as a reordering of the global system in the late 2020s.
Making either scenario more of a risk is that military planners and political leaders on all sides assume their side would be the one to win in a “short” and “sharp” fight, to use common phrases. It would be anything but.
A great power conflict would be quite different from the small wars of today that the U.S. has grow accustomed to and, in turn, others think reveal a new American weakness.