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erma4kov [3.2K]
4 years ago
15

What rights does the declaration of Independence express?

History
2 answers:
Contact [7]4 years ago
8 0
It states many things, such as all humans are endowed by their creator with unalienable rights, and among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Westkost [7]4 years ago
6 0
Human rights such as liberty and the pursuit of happiness
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Explain a diplomatic act in the US history?
Dvinal [7]

Answer:

The Rogers Act

Explanation:

In 1924, the Rogers Act fundamentally reformed the foreign services by establishing a career organization based on competitive examination and merit promotion. The Diplomatic and Consular Services were unified into one organization performing both functions. Members of the new “Foreign Service of the United States of America” would be commissioned in a given class at a set salary rather than commissioned for service at a specific overseas mission or post. Salaries would range from $3,000 for the lowest level (Class 9) to $9,000 for Class 1 officers. Officers would be placed in positions for three years with the presumption of regular rotation to other assignments. The Rogers Act granted regular home leave and set up a retirement system. It also allowed for representational expenses, although these allowances were not authorized until 1931. A special reinstatement provision permitted career officers who became chiefs of mission to remain in the Foreign Service after completing their tours of duty. Earlier they had been required to resign without assurance of a future presidential appointment to other responsible duties, which led at times to the discarding of the most experienced and competent officers at the height of their abilities.

Several other measures also furthered reform. In 1925, the Foreign Service School was founded to provide specialized training in languages and other necessary skills. The following year, Congress passed the Foreign Service Buildings Act; among other things, it established a fund of $2-million per year—gradually increasing in later years—for the construction, purchase, and maintenance of missions and consulates overseas. The U.S. Government also took responsibility for the purchase or rental of office space and living quarters, further reducing a need for private wealth as a prerequisite to a diplomatic career.

Despite these improvements, certain flaws in the Rogers Act became apparent, especially inequities in the promotion of those serving in consular assignments. Congress moved to correct the problems in the Moses-Linthicum Act (1931), which reorganized the Board of Foreign Service Personnel to ensure impartial promotion practices. Other sections of the law improved salaries, authorized representation and post allowances and paid annual leave and sick leave, set up an improved retirement system, and conferred career status on clerks in the Foreign Service. Reflecting on these reforms, Assistant Secretary of State Wilbur J. Carr noted that “the Foreign Service had finally attained the goal for which Presidents, Secretaries of State, and businessmen of the country had striven for years, namely, a reasonable, adequate provision in the way of pay and allowances for the men who served the United States in a diplomatic or consular capacity in foreign countries.”

Unfortunately many of these gains proved temporary. During the Great Depression, economies in government led to the suspension of promotions, a 15 per cent reduction in salaries, abolition of representational and living allowances, elimination of paid home leaves, and suspension of recruiting for four years. The result was a 10 percent reduction in the size of the Foreign Service between July 1932 and December 1934.

3 0
4 years ago
Explain two effects on Germany of Stresemann's work to reorganise
lozanna [386]

Answer:

1) Stresemann introduced reforms to help ordinary people such as job centres, unemployment pay and better housing.

2)Under Stresemann's guidance, the government called off the strike, persuaded the French to leave the Ruhr and changed the currency to the Rentenmark which helped solve hyperinflation.

8 0
2 years ago
Why was slavery more common in the colony of South Carolina?
sertanlavr [38]

Slaves represented Southern planters' most significant investment—and the bulk of their wealth. Building a commercial enterprise out of the wilderness required labor and lots of it. For much of the 1600s, the American colonies operated as agricultural economies, driven largely by indentured servitude.Mar 6, 2018

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3 years ago
The people who had the greatest influence on FDR were his schoolmates of groton. true or false
Len [333]
False. The people who had the greatest influence on President Franklin Delano Roosevelt were not his schoolmates of Groton, it was Endicott Peabody, the headmaster of the school.
7 0
3 years ago
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When it comes to periodization, which of the following events is the best
zhannawk [14.2K]
I feel emancipation proclamation was probably one of the bigger turning point but what came after C which was WWII was also quite significant.
5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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