Answer:
Smuggling prevented the British economy from taxing on imports. Non-imported (i think you mean) agreements were protests by colonists from purchasing British goods, preventing revenue to enter the British economy.
Explanation:
Non-IMPORTED agreements were a series of commercial restrictions adopted by American colonists to protest British revenue policies prior to the American Revolution.
Answer:
A)Xenophobia
Explanation:
"Xenophobia" is a word of Greek origin that represents the dislike and aversion that an individual has towards anything or anyone who is from a country other than that in which that individual was born. Xenophobia is very much associated with racism, intolerance and prejudice and can often trigger violent and embarrassing situations. This is because people who are xenophobic take a disrespectful, offensive and brutal attitude towards everything that is foreign.
The US role played in the Vietnam War was C. The US became involved because they feared that other countries would fall to communism like dominoes. The Vietnam War was the longest war fought by the US in its history until the War in Afghanistan surpassed it recently. Involvement began slowly at first but gradually ramped up resulting in a widespread feeling of war weariness in the US where activists began to actively oppose war efforts and speak out against involvement on the whole.
There are many theories to power, be they liberal, socialist or otherwise. Many have been developed over centuries of thought, which pick apart the very nature of our society and world order. But of all the theories that I’ve come across, one sticks out more than any other, and it is the reason I hold such strong free-market/anti-state views. It’s called Public Choice theory, but don’t ask me why, because it seems to explain why any one but ’the public’ makes choices today.
Public Choice theory is modern, having only really taken off during the 1960’s, but I believe it grants a very realistic and worrying view of Britain’s power structure, and exposes many very deep scars which socialism and Keynesianism unintentionally inflicted on our country. It was heavily developed by the US economist James Buchanan, who won the 1986 Nobel Memorial Prize for his work, and who advised Margaret Thatcher through the Institute for Economic Affairs during the late 1970′s.
Just like capitalism, Public Choice theory is based on two simple assumptions about human nature. Firstly, that humans are principally self-interested. That’s not to say we’re selfish, which is somewhat more immoral, but rather that we will always aim to fulfil our wants and desires, economic or otherwise. Secondly, that humans are rational; when presented with a series of options, we will select whichever makes us the most happy for the least cost. Rational Choice theory, as it is called, has come under substantial intellectual attack in the past, and I don’t personally believe that all humans act completely rationally all the time, but as a model for human behaviour, I’d say it provides a pretty good analysis.