Answer:
Explanation:His decision was mainly based on the estimate of half a million Allied casualties likely to be caused by invading the home islands of Japan. There was also the likely death rate from starvation for Allied PoWs and civilians as the war dragged on well into 1946.
Mesopotamians had a theocracy and Egypt had a plutocracy
Answer;
It granted the United States access to both the Mississippi River and the Port of New Orleans.
Explanation;
Pinckney's Treaty was favorable for the United States in that;
- it provided for a mutual recognition of the border between US Territory and the Spanish colonies
- it opened the Mississippi River to American traffic and trade and allowed Americans to use the port of New Orleans.
Thomas Pinckney was US minister to Great Britain. He was sent to Spain to sign treaty to secure US land claims west of Appalachians
-Pinckney's Treaty of 1795; Spain gave up all claims to land east of the Mississippi (except Florida) and recognized the 31st parallel as the southern boundary of the United States and the northern boundary of Florida. Spain also agreed to open the Mississippi River to traffic by Spanish subjects and U.S. citizens, and to allow American traders to use the port of New Orleans
Answer:
A judge overturns a legal precedent.
Explanation:
A judge who's an activist will mostly wants to leave its own imprint on the case. This judge will certainly NOT refer that to Congress, nor will base his judgement on precedents nor to uphold a lower court's ruling.
He will overturn a legal precedent, trying to make a new legal precedent and re-write the law into his own views, bypassing the decisions of his colleagues in previous similar cases, and the text of the laws adopted by Congress.
Further fighting erupted over the canal, now between Britain and the newly alligned Germany and Turkey; however, the attempts at seizure were not successful. Soon after, France divided up a large portion of the Ottoman empire with Britain after the fall of Turkey in 1918. The two rivals were still neck and neck in competition.