<span>When Thomas Jefferson
agreed to buy the territory of Louisiana, he wanted to do it
constitutionally, so he wanted to make an amendment to the Constitution
first, but the congress did not pay attention to his plans to amend the
constitution, and the purchase was made in 1803 but without the legality that it required. For
Jefferson's strong values, acquiring territories was a very serious
matter, and although it was vital for the USA to purchase Louisiana, as
Jefferson expressed it, the Constitution did not give the government
powers to buy and maintain territories. <span>But
perhaps compromising its principles for the purchase of Louisiana, was
something that in 1810 the same Jefferson described as a great
achievement and a success, the risk for a great common good to the
nation.</span></span>
Answer:
They were working in a much more modern environment, they had big windows, tall ceilings, and it wasn't hot.
Answer: Mongol Empire
The Mongol Empire, founded by Genghis Khan in 1206, was the largest contiguous land empire in world history. Originating from the Mongol heartland in the Steppe of central Asia, by the late 13th century it spanned from the Pacific Ocean in the east to the Danube River and the shores of the Persian Gulf in the west.
In Another Brick in The Wall, one of the most famous tracks of the group, Pink's detachment already has a form, and it is the title itself that suggests it any tragedy, injustice, or abuse can only be “another brick” in an already existing wall.
39 years ago today, the South African government issued a ban on Pink Floyd's Another Brick In The Wall after the lyrics were used by school children to protest their inferior education in apartheid-era black schools.
Another Brick in the Wall is a three-part composition on Pink Floyd's 1979 rock opera The Wall, written by bassist Roger Waters. "Part 2", a protest song against corporal punishment, and rigid and abusive schooling, features a children's choir.
Learn more about Brick in The Wall here
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To bury their dead tribesmen and women