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DiKsa [7]
4 years ago
14

According to Charles Kurzman (1996), what perception motivated Iranian protesters who toppled the shah's regime in the late 1970

s?
Social Studies
1 answer:
Shkiper50 [21]4 years ago
8 0

<u>Answer: </u>

According to Kurzman, the perception that motivated the Iranian protestors to topple the Shah's regime came from the strong and sudden belief that they could win.

<u>Explanation: </u>

  • The developments that led to the overthrowing of the Shah of Iran by the citizens had begun with the growing affinity between the Shah and the then president of the United States.
  • As the citizens that were protesting realized that they had vast support and the Shah had already began to fear their actions, their confidence multiplied and their belief that they could win became rigid.
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The driver of a tractor-trailer lost control of his vehicle after driving onto an icy bridge in excess of the speed limit and sl
Oksana_A [137]

Answer:

No, because the delivery van striking the trooper was the actual cause of his injuries.

Explanation:

The state trooper will not prevail against the tractor trailer driver. This is because tractor trailer was not the actual cause for the injuries of the trooper. It was the deliver van which skid on the icy road and hit the trooper and which made him injured.

It was when the trooper went to respond to the accident of the tractor trailer that the delivery van approached the icy bridge and strike the trooper.

Thus the answer is No.

6 0
3 years ago
How is a border error made in 1818 significant to people today?
IgorLugansk [536]

Answer:

For years, the state of Georgia has been in desperate need of water. Droughts and water rationing today are commonplace, and Georgia may have a legitimate claim to a section of real estate in Tennessee that would give the state partial rights to the waters of the Tennessee River. That will be for the attorneys to hammer out and for Congress to ultimately decide. But what I find even more thought-provoking is what would happen to the potentially hundreds of thousands of Tennessee residents who would wake up one morning to find they are now Georgians, without having moved one inch.

Back in 1796, the common border of Tennessee and Georgia was determined by the United States Congress. It was to be drawn along the 35th parallel of north latitude. In 1818, two surveyors were charged with mapping this out: one from Tennessee and the other from Georgia. Due to human error, antiquated equipment, or just haphazard surveying of the treacherous terrain, the border was actually mapped one mile south of where it was intended. In 1826, James Camack, a Georgia mathematician who was one of the original surveyors, admitted the error. Three attempts were made to move the border, but none succeeded. That one-mile error may seem insignificant after nearly 190 years of relative acceptance on both sides, but it has now become very significant and critical to the state of Georgia in general, and to the City of Atlanta in particular.

Atlanta is one of the few cities on the continent that’s not built on a water source capable of sustaining it. One of the region’s main reservoirs, Lake Lanier, now stands at 15 feet below normal levels. Given the urban sprawl of the city, the commodity of water has become very precious. Today that one-mile difference would provide the state of Georgia with ownership rights to a small portion of the Tennessee River, and the water so badly needed. Tennessee officials call the move absurd, even musing about dusting off the muskets, but to Georgia legislators it is desperately serious, and they will go to court to correct the error.

So: What if this seemingly far-fetched border shift actually does come to pass? How would the affected Tennesseans’ lives change? Of course there would be the normal nuisances like new phone numbers, drivers’ licenses, and insurance cards. New power and phone companies with which to deal. Forming new allegiances to the Falcons rather than the Titans. (OK, well, that part will never happen!)

But the data suggests that the day-to-day lives of these new Georgians would change for the worse. First, the value of their homes would drop. The median home price in Tennessee is $163,000. In Georgia, it is

$150,000. Further, as Travis H. Brown points out in How Money Walks, they would be pushed from a state with no state income tax to one with a 6% tax; from a state with a state & local tax burden of 7.7% to one with 9%; and from a state with taxes per capita of $2,707 to one that levies an average of $3,222. And finally, on a scale from 1 to 50 (with 1 having the worst national tax burden) Tennessee is ranked nearly the lowest at # 48, to Georgia’s #33.

Clearly, this issue is not simply a story about the water. It is also about the potentially hundreds of thousands of people whose lives will be changed forever.

6 0
3 years ago
The main reason for the large population growth in Texas between 1850 and 1860 was
navik [9.2K]

Answer:

an enormous number of southerners, many of them enslaved, moved west to expand the cotton belt. The 1860 census counted 169,000 enslaved persons, roughly 30% of the state population. After the civil war, whites continued to arrive from nearby southern states, causing the population to double by 1880 and double again in the following twenty years. African Americans contributed little to this late 19th century migration.

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
Help plz thank youuu
krek1111 [17]
Im personally leaning towards B and E.
3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Former president Barack Obama is typically referred to as black or African American, not "half-black" or "half African American,
Vedmedyk [2.9K]

Answer:

intersectionality

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
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