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Lorico [155]
3 years ago
10

What imports effect did the invention of gunpowder have on the development of east asia

History
1 answer:
adoni [48]3 years ago
8 0
Gunpowder helped create weapons which have east Asia become more and more powerful
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Why is Iran’s government classified as authoritarian?
BlackZzzverrR [31]

Since its founding in 1979, the Islamic Republic of Iran has dedicated considerable resources to constructing new international norms that reflect the practices, worldview, and aspirations of the ruling authorities in Tehran—all with the goal of enhancing its legitimacy and devaluing its domestic critics. From recasting the conventional principles of human rights and political participation to launching alternative international media and working to reshape and restrict access to the Internet, the Islamic Republic’s quest to forge counternorms is moving ahead unabated. In the course of these efforts, it seeks out global partners that share its agenda. Tehran has found Russia and China, in particular, to be useful role models, facilitators, and collaborators.

Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic, considered the very notion of “democracy” to be an undesirable Western concept. He insisted that “Islam itself is democratic” and set out to define Islam’s provisions for political life. In the infant days of the 1979 revolution, few dared to defy the icon of the anti-shah movement over a single word, allowing Khomeini to prevail in this matter. Iran thus became an “Islamic republic,” leading to an ongoing struggle to define the system’s republican character. Khomeini and his inner circle in the Islamic Republican Party quickly formulated the new polity’s characteristics, which over the years became the regime’s counter to democracy. Those who opposed the new constitutional arrangement, starting with Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan in November 1979, were sidelined or imprisoned. Some, including the Islamic Republic’s first elected president, Abolhassan Bani Sadr, even fled.

Although the popular uprising against the monarchical dictatorship of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi (1941–79) had been a rainbow movement with strong prodemocracy leanings, less than two years later Khomeini had installed himself as Iran’s supreme leader and “God’s representative on earth.” The democratic struggle had ironically produced an unabashedly illiberal theocracy that soon proved resourceful in its quest to survive, predatory in its political behavior, and unprincipled in its disposition. Before Ayatollah Khomeini died in June 1989, he cemented this Machiavellian approach by decreeing that the interests of the “Islamic Republic” superseded even the tenets of Islam. Thus the very few who can define the interests of the system, principally the supreme leader himself, were made invincible.

Two constant features have been part and parcel of the political process in Iran ever since: First, there has been a continuing struggle among key regime personalities, factions, and institutions to define, own, and defend the revolution of 1979 and “Iranian national interests.” Second, thanks to intense intraregime competition for influence—most visible in the violent schism that followed the disputed 2009 presidential election—the Islamic Republic has faced a hemorrhaging of support from within its ranks. Accordingly, although the regime has managed to consolidate its institutional grip, the system’s basic legitimacy is no more secure today than it was in 1979.

The regime’s many critics see Iran’s “Islamic democracy” as a façade that allows the current supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to maximize control while making minimal concessions to a society hungry for genuine political rights. When President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad opportunistically began to challenge Khamenei during Ahmadinejad’s second term in office (2009–13), Khamenei publicly warned that the presidency could be eliminated altogether. The notion of “Islamic democracy” is perhaps the most blatant counternorm conceived by the Islamic Republic, but Ayatollah Khamenei is not stopping there

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3 years ago
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What would it look like if a Spanish Explorer tried to convert a Native American? )
dezoksy [38]

Answer and Explanation:

For the Spanish explorer to be able to convert the native American, it would be necessary for the native to learn the Spanish language that would be taught by the Jesuit explorer. This would be necessary for the native to be able to read and understand biblical texts. This shows how important education was for the conversion of the natives.

This was done in schools that promoted the abandonment of indigenous practices and the adoption of Spanish practices. The natives could resist the efforts of the explorer, who would respond with punishment, often physical.

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3 years ago
What latin american country is the world leader in coffee production?
aliina [53]
Brazil is the world leader in coffee production
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Considering what you know of Roger Williams — that he was a Puritan with strong beliefs but also went against church leaders — w
Scorpion4ik [409]

The correct answer to this open question is the following.

Considering what I know of Roger Williams — that he was a Puritan with strong beliefs but also went against church leaders —I think the official church of Rhode Island was a place to worship God, but enough criteria to respect other religious systems because Williams supported religious freedom and always expressed tolerance to different religious points of view. Roger Williams was the founder of Rhode Island, and from the beginning, he worked for the separation of state and religious issues. When he publicly told that he was against the confiscation of land that belonged to Native American Indians, the people from the colony rejected his ideas and Williams had to leave Massachusetts Bay Colony and with a group of supported he traveled to modern-day Rhode Island, where he founded the Baptist Church of Rhode Island. A place where religious tolerance allowed many forms of though.

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3 years ago
Which free Italian country started to help other Italian speaking countries become independent?
Georgia [21]
The answer is C. Piedmont/  Just took the test and it showed the correct answer in the results.
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