Answer:
Explanation:
"Four score and seven years ago our father brought forth on this continent, a new nation..."
- Referred to American Revolution (1776)
"...conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to proposition that all men are created equal."
"Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure."
- The Civil War was a test of democracy.
"We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live."
-The reason for the ceremony
"...that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion..."
- The dead inspire the living.
"...and that government of the people, by the people, for the people..."
- Reaffirmed the idea of government by consent of the people
Hello! I’m pretty sure #1 is A, but I’m honestly not sure about the rest. I hope I could at least be some help, good luck!
Answer:
Generally, Congress determines the jurisdiction of the federal courts. The inferior courts are constrained by the decisions of the Supreme Court once the Supreme Court interprets a law, inferior courts must apply the Supreme Court's interpretation to the facts of a particular case.
Maybe that will help
Answer:
B. the Soviet Union
<h2>
What was the intended purpose of the Potsdam Conference?</h2>
The major purpose of the Potsdam summit between Truman, Stalin, and Churchill—later replaced by Atlee—was to determine Germany's postwar position. How might a nation that has been split into four zones of occupation be united? What would the borders of Germany be after the war? (Stalin insisted and was granted the port of Konisberg, which is now Kaliningrad.) Would Germany be allowed to remilitarize, under allied supervision and control ? Would Germany be allowed to reindustrialize, or would it become mostly an agricultural country? (A plan that Stalin and FDR's Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau both supported.) Would elections be held to bring about German reunification? What would the process be for de-Nazification? How would the atrocities caused by the German invasion and occupation be made up to the USSR? Some historians attribute the start of the Cold War to this conference rather than Churchill's "Iron Curtain" speech one year later because none of these concerns were resolved at Potsdam.
Though it wasn't discussed in any detail, ending the war with Japan was another subject. Stalin vowed to launch a comprehensive offensive against the Japanese in Manchuria, and he did so. In his memoirs, Churchill writes that when Truman informed Stalin that the United States had "a weapon of tremendous destructive powers" that would soon be used in the Pacific theater to finish the war, Stalin did not react in horror but instead grinned subtly. (Perhaps he was aware of the A-bomb already?)
Frustrated, Truman returned home. Churchill had, in the words of the British voters, "retired from high office" in favor of the Labour Party and Atlee, and Stalin was undoubtedly happy that he kept East Germany, which he then went on to loot.
Thank you,
Eddie