(Favorable slogan) Virtue, mission, and destiny under God.
This slogan summarizes the three main points used by the advocates of the “Manifest Destiny” doctrine (virtue of the American people, a mission to change the “Old World” and the manifest destiny under God’s guidance). Considering the thesis of the “American exceptionality”, the country had the legitimacy to expand itself while spreading the values of freedom and democracy.
(Unfavorable slogan) Don’t plant in America’s soil the seed of imperialism! Say no to the right of conquest!
Many were critic with the “Manifest Destiny” doctrine and considered it to be belligerent and contrary to the Republican values. It constituted a call for aggression which was, according to their point of view, a contradiction with the democratic founding values of the country.
Answer:
Ancient civilizations based a large part of their economy and their subsistence on trade and exchange of goods. Thus, they were guided by a very simple premise: they traded what they had left over, to obtain in exchange what they lacked. For example, if a civilization overproduced wheat, it could trade that surplus for goods it did not have, such as animals. In this way, all civilizations covered their needs without the obligation to procure them all by their own hand.
Answer:
a. The use of Greek mythical heroes for propaganda
Explanation:
The statue of Commodus is actually a statue of Hercules, the mythical greek demigod, and son of Zeus.
What the emperor Commodus intended with the statue, was to draw a comparison between himself and the figure of Hercules: what the Greek hero represents: strenghts and divinity.
For this reason, it can be said that the main function of the statue was to use Greek mythical figures for political propaganda.
The history of religion in early Virginia begins with the commencing of Anglican<span>services in Jamestown 1607, which became the established church in 1619, and culminates with the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom in 1786.</span>
The Founding Fathers of the United States believed in all of the following except "<span>D. military buildup", since they were generally against the idea of a standing army since they thought it could lead to despotism.</span>