it's D vital hope that helps
Like Hobbes, Locke believed in a natural right to life, liberty, and property. It was once conventional wisdom that Locke greatly influenced the American Revolutionary War with his writings of natural rights, but this claim has been the subject of protracted dispute in recent decades.
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George B. McClellan is your answer
McClellan was a prominent general towards the beginning of the civil war, and was given the Army of Pontomac that was placed under his control. He was able to train them to become one of the largest US armies that was well-equipped, well-trained, and was a formidable force. However, McClellan was known to many of the US government officials as a "coward". He failed to move his army out to war many times, and was afraid of losing. He also always over-estimated the enemies, and started to have a harrowing relationship with Lincoln, leading to his removal from being the leader of the Army of Pontomac. He later ran against Lincoln in the Democratic Party before Lincoln's second term.
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Taking into account the statement above: "In 1965 one of the founders of Intel predicted, "The density of transistors in an integrated circuit will double every year." This is now known as"
This is now known as Moore's law.
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"In his farewell Presidential address, George Washington advised American citizens to view themselves as a cohesive unit and avoid political parties and issued a special warning to be wary of attachments and entanglements with other nations."