Why, The Wilmot Proviso amendment would have closed California and New
Mexico to slavery in 1846 as a requirement for their annexation,
but Congress did not pass the proviso.
U.S. treaties and international agreements currently in force (i.e., excluding those, some of which are included on this page, that are no longer in force, and that are signed but not ratified or otherwise have not yet entered into force), divided between (1) bilateral treaties organized by state and then by topic, and (2) multilateral treaties organized by topic, see the annual State Department publication.
I have an incomplete list but I hope it helps.
Contents
1 Pre-Revolutionary War treaties
2 U.S. international treaties
2.1 1776–1799
2.2 1800–1849
2.3 1850–1899
2.4 1900–1949
2.5 1950–1999
2.6 2000–current
3 U.S.–Native American treaties
3.1 1778–1799
3.2 1800–1809
3.3 1810–1819
3.4 1820–1829
3.5 1830–1839
3.6 1840–1849
3.7 1850–1859
3.8 1860–1869
3.9 1870–1879
3.10 1880–present
Hope this helps! ^^
Answer:
it depends on the kind of help
Explanation:
if you are asking a foreign government for help in order to escape punishment for a crime, then it should be illegal
if its for protection for something that's not considered a crime, then it shouldn't be illegal
The Sumerian poem Hymn to Ninkasi is both a song of praise to the goddess of beer, Ninkasi, and a recipe for beer, first written down around 1800 BCE. Beer was made from bippar (twice-baked barley bread) which was then fermented and beer brewing was always associated with baking.
The freedmen, who wanted autonomy and independence, refused to sign contracts that required gang labor, and sharecropping emerged as a compromise. ... In exchange for the use of land, a cabin, and supplies, sharecroppers agreed to raise a cash crop and give a portion, usually 50 percent, of the crop to their landlord