Answer:
Seize-Take Hold Suddenly Or Forcibly
Answer:
Yes. But only on the land that wasn't pre-occupied by the native.
Explanation:
The vast majority of the land in North America at the time was inhabited. Coming to this territory to form farms and towns would not bother any particularly group of people.
The creation for farms and towns itself wasn't immoral.
But, doing so while taking the ancestral land of the locals and forced them to moved away or kill them is considered as 'immoral'. There were plenty of space that hey can occupied without doing so.
The Spanish invasion of Chile and the majority of Latin America changed its history. The Spanish rule exploited the country during the mercantilist era. Independence came in 1844 and with it, economic and political stability.
Chile started to sell copper and nitrate, and copper is still the foundation of the Chilean economy. The beginning of the 20th century came with the economic crisis for Chile, the demand for mineral nitrates fell. The Great Depression did not help the country either.
Chilean economy got better with WWII with a higher demand for copper. The 70s were a difficult period for Chile, Pinochet was a brutal dictator, he widespread repression, torture and murder, it was only in the early 80s that democracy returned to the country, with it came free market system, many state-owned firms were sold, privatizations continued.
Today, with political stability, Chile is one of the fourty most developed countries in the world, with a robust economy.
<span>After the oil boom that happened in Pennsylvania during
1859. 3 other states started to discovered vast oil reserved in their country.
=> 2 of these countries are California and Texas.
=> For Texas, it was a great opportunity to be able to discover vast oil
reserves for their country because it helped a lot with their economic growth.
During 1940, Texas was already considered as the one of the biggest oil producing
state.
Later they were joined by Kansas, Oklahoma and Illinois.
</span>
Answer:
number 4: house of commons