The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Can legislative compromises solve moral issues?
It is an interesting question that cannot be answered with a simple "yes" or "no." That is the nature of moral and ethical issues.
Legislative compromises serve to dictate laws that must be enforced. But you cannot enforce a moral issue. That is why it is moral.
Legislators must serve the citizens who voted for them. Not to the interests of political action committees (PACs) or private interests of corporations. Legislators serve the American people, not to a lobbyist that negotiates on the personal agendas of the people who are rich.
That is the moral issue. The way a legislator is going to act when facing the pressure of particular political agendas that are the opposite of the interests of the US citizens.
Answer:
1.Raleigh
2.The flag of the State of North Carolina is defined by law as follows: ... It bears the dates of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence (May 20, 1775) and of the Halifax Resolves (April 12, 1776), documents that place North Carolina at the forefront of the American independence movement.
3.100 countries
4.Cardinal
Number two I just searched up
Explanation:
Answer:
Bartolome de las Casas witnessed the brutal treatment that the spanish conquistadors gave to the Native Americans who lived in Hispaniola and Cuba.
They natives were killed frequently in conflicts, became enslaved, and many died while enduring forced labor.
This horrified de las Casas, because he believed that the natives were equally rational and humane as the Spaniards. The only thing that made them different was that the Natives were not christians.
Bartolome de las Casas argued for the end of the enslavement of native americans, and he succeeded, in a way, because slavery was replaced with a system known as "Encomienda". Under the Encomienda, natives are christianized, are not formally slaves, but more like serfs. This system was more or less a reenactment of medieval feudalism, but in the Spanish Americas.
Bartome de las Casas did not recommend Encomienda either, his views were probably misinterpreted.