Washington ultimately took Hamilton's side and drafted a Statement of Neutrality on April 22, 1793. The Statement of Neutrality voiced the United States' intention to avoid foreign entanglements, to keep the United States out of European politics, and to make temporary alliances only in emergency scenarios.
You have to look for the answer in the article you've read, it's the authors opinion of what new social network organization will replace
The answer would be A. This is because an unlimited government is simply a government that does not have effective controls over the power of its ruler(s).
Examples of an unlimited government are present-day North Korea and Hitler’s Nazi Germany. Both of which have little to no restrictions on what the country’s leader can do.
Answer:
It can hurt the envirment around the leach.
Explanation:
The motto of the era was “Enrich the Country and Strengthen the Military” and at the helm of this effort was Emperor Meiji.
"With Emperor Meiji’s ascension to the throne in 1867, japan theoretically restored power to the emperor, but because he was only 15 years old he had little governing power. Instead, the power rested with the new government consisting of a small, close-knit cabinet of advisers. This new cabinet immediately began implementing a series of reforms to both strengthen and unify Japan. One of their largest concerns was that Japan would not be able to regain its sovereignty if it did not modernize. With the recent display of the superior armament of the United States military with Commodore Perry in 1853, such concerns were not unfounded.
The goals of the early leaders of the Meiji era were ambitious, as they established new economic, political, and social institutions that governed Japan through World War II. The majority of these reforms were greatly influenced by the West, but they never deviated significantly from Japan’s cultural and historical roots. Perhaps most dramatically, it abolished the old system of a social hierarchy based on inherited status. For example, samurai, who historically were recognized as a warrior class, could now be farmers and engage in trade and commerce, and townspeople could now join Japan’s new army." - can be found in this article https://www.facinghistory.org/nanjing-atrocities/nation-building/meiji-period-japan