D. Almost 3,000 people being killed.
Answer:
Explanation:
Roosevelt knew that war was inevitable. The American people did not want to engage in another war -- the first war was bad enough. Ordinary Americans wanted peace and prosperity,
Roosevelt was not a war monger. He didn't like the idea of war, but he thought it was inevitable. Any thought of appeasing the Japanese was (for Roosevelt) an unthinkable idea. He saw what that did with Germany and Great Britain. He did try to negotiate with Japan -- to no avail once Pearl Harbor happened.
So he waited. That's all he could do because America was not willing and not motivated and not ready to go to war.
Answer:
Law of April 6, 1830.
Explanation:
Manuel de Mier y Teran was a Mexican General who issued a report to the government in 1829. In his report, he initialized that slavery should be prohibited and this policy also called to close the borders to forbid any Americans come into the borders of Texas.
He outlined many recommendations in his report, of which many recommendations were adopted into the law under the Law of April 6, 1830. The laws were passed under the Presidentship of Anastasio Bustamante.
Therefore, the correct answer is Law of April 6, 1830.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
He did not want to punish the south, he wanted them to become like the Union.
Answer:
The correct answer is B. The Edict of Milan meant that wherever the Roman Empire expanded, Christianity would go there also.
Explanation:
The Edict of Milan was an agreement reached in 313 by the Roman emperors Constantine and Licinius at a meeting in Milan, proclaiming religious tolerance in the Roman Empire. The Edict of Milan was an important step towards the conversion of Christianity into the official religion of the empire.
The Edict affirmed that freedom of religion was introduced in the Roman Empire. It stated that the Roman citizens were free to choose their religion and could freely confess it without hindrance. It therefore protected non-Christian religions. Christianity no longer needed that protection after the Edict of Nicomedia, two years earlier.
This decree formally ratified the end of the Christian persecutions, which ended in Western Europe in 305 or 306 and in the Eastern Empire in 311. The initiative for this ratification came from Licinius. It would later be attributed to Constantine the Great, who had emerged victorious in their battles and had signed the edict in 312.