"do not fear my friends"! "new rulers is new change"! but change does not all ways mean bad! for change is the solution! turning to the fate is like turning against your self. understand this my friends i to fear this! but...(take over from here for this should get you started)
Answer:
it is true because i answer the same question before lol have a good day
Explanation:
James Madison, like most of the Founding Fathers, would be very against the idea of a person elected to the House of Representatives serving at the same time on the Supreme Court, since this would be a blatant violation of the separation of powers that is so crucial in keeping a democracy alive.
I think because if one person held a monopoly on (let's say clothes) it provides less variety for everyone as well as essentially they get all of the revenue and smaller (family owned and such stores) businesses go out of business or bought by the bigger businesses. (Also think of the board game Monopoly, when someone owns a lot of places that cost a lot and people land on it, they pay a lot. Then someone runs out of money and has to sell the property, meaning less of a chance for them to make money and those with money now buy the available land, increasing their chances of getting money) (So essentially the rich get richer and the poor get poorer and there is a large wealth disparity)
Hope this explanation helps. If not, I could try to elaborate.
Answer:
IM LITERALLY BEGGING FOR THE BRAINLIEST ANSWWER....P-L-E-A-S-E GIVE BRAINLIEST PLEASEEEEE T_T
Explanation:
1.Internal pressures on Japanese society, brought on by the Meiji push to modernize, were partly alleviated by allowing more Japanese to migrate to Hawaii and the United States. Seattle and Tacoma were the primary ports of entry for the Nikkei migration to the United States mainland.
2.The attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, plunged the United States into war and planted the notion that the Japanese were treacherous and barbaric in the minds of Americans.
3. As farmers were forced to leave their land, and workers were left jobless by foreign competition, they looked more and more for a better life outside the islands of their homeland. As Japanese wages plummeted, and word of a booming U.S. economy spread, the lure of the United States became difficult to resist.
4.The most recent United States Census officially recognized five racial categories (White American, Black or African American, American Indian, Alaska Native, Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Other Pacific Islander) as well as people of two or more races.The racial and ethnic composition of the more than 265 million U.S. residents is 1 percent American Indian, 3 percent Asian, 11 percent Hispanic, 12 percent Black, and 73 percent White (Deardorff and Hollmann, 1997)—quite different than it was 50 years ago, and projected to be different 50 years from now.