Haiti
Having exhausted all diplomatic alternatives, President
Clinton appeared on national television and addressed his readiness to send
ground troops to force out a military leadership that had seized power from the
democratically elected Rev, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. He ordered the military
leaders to leave or face the wrath of being overthrown.
Answer:
Thomas Harriot was an Astronomer and mathematician. He travelled to the Roanoke Island.
Explanation:
Thomas Harriot was an astronomer who encountered the Indian population at Roanoke Island where he has to leant Algonquian language. Later on he has published his voyage on entitled by "A Briefed and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia".
There, Harriot relate the nature and manner of the people. His perception towards Algonquian people was biased. He wrote that "in respect of us a people poorer, and for wants of skill and judgement".
He wrote that those people were poor and have loose clothed and their skin was dark and dull. Their towns were so small. They walled their house with the bark of trees.
The Indian National Congress was founded in 1885 to lead the campaign for independence. It was to be used as a platform for educated Indians and the British Raj for political and civic dialogue to ease into independence, however the Indian part of the Indian National Congress was experiencing resistance from the British Raj, so their ideas towards independence became more radicalized.
The Gracchus reforms which took place in second century B.C by brothers Tiberius and Gaius; esentially attempted to return the land to small farmers (Plebeians) from the hands of the wealthy class (Patricians).
The immediate outcome of this struggle was instability in Rome and the assassination of both brothers directly by the hand of the senators in broad daylight with absolute impunity, this, showing the power of the senate in republican Rome, as well as, how difficult it was to change the situation.
Historians at the time even claim that within 15 years after the Gracchus reforms, the Plebeians were in a much worse position than before, many of them reduced to unemployment.
The outcome in the long term was no good for plebeians either. The reforms had no permanent effect, some of them were repealed at once while some continued with weak effects over time. Land problems and differences between classes plagued Rome at all times thereafter.