Answer:
option c
Explanation:
According to Machiavelli, the ends always justify the means—no matter how cruel, calculating or immoral those means might be. Tony Soprano and Shakespeare’s Macbeth may be well-known Machiavellian characters, but the man whose name inspired the term, Niccolo Machiavelli, didn’t operate by his own cynical rule book. Rather, when Machiavelli wrote The Prince, his shrewd guidelines to power in the 16th century, he was an exiled statesman angling for a post in the Florentine government. It was his hope that a strong sovereign, as outlined in his writing, could return Florence to its former glory.
Machiavelli’s guide to power was revolutionary in that it described how powerful people succeeded—as he saw it—rather than as one imagined a leader should operate.
Before his exile, Machiavelli had navigated the volatile political environment of 16th-century Italy as a statesman. There were constant power struggles at the time between the city-states of Italy, the Holy Roman Empire, France and Spain
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It was a proposal that would reinstate the Southern states. This plan for Reconstruction ordered that a state could be reintergrated back into the United States when 10% of the 1860 vote from that state had taken an oath of loyalty to the United States to obey the Emancipation.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
It boosted morale because it was their first victory, and more people volunteered because they saw the british could be beaten.
B. Britain and France The reason is because they were our allies the others were NOT.