The young people who enlisted were people who were hopeful and willing to fight for the greater good.
We can arrive at this answer because:
- The Revolutionary Army was the army formed in America to fight the British army during the American Revolution.
- The men who enlisted were of different ages, but many of them were very young, under 20 years of age.
- During enlistment, they were hopeful and willing to fight, as they believed that this was their duty and that it would bring great honor and benefits.
They believed they were enlisting in pursuit of a greater good, which was greater than any fear or doubt.
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The war on Terror was a response to the 9/11 attack.
Horace Mann was an educational reformer who lived in the US in the 19th century. He was a first to advocate a system of a public schools and public education as he believed that everyone had a right to education and that it should be free, democratic and have a professionally trained educators who would provide a quality education.
West Africa's smaller societies such as Benin and Hausa, grew in ways such as trade and farming, building off of previous achievements. Africa's larger kingdoms improved in the factors of education, with the introduction of new Muslim teachings, as seen in maliand shonghai kingdoms.
Hey, that's a great essay prompt. It often happens that when threatened by some threat to our way of life in a democracy, we respond in very undemocratic ways. During the McCarthy years, people's privacy was invaded as accusations about communists and communist sympathizers were aimed at all sorts of people. Many people in the Hollywood film industry were targeted during that time, for instance. But defenders of freedom (including film and television people) fought back against that. We must always adhere to our primary aims as a society -- the rights and liberties of each individual. We don't want to get into "witch hunts" where we suspect our neighbors of evil for no good reason.
Speaking of "witch hunts," the playwright Arthur Miller wrote a really powerful play in 1953, during the Cold War, which focused on the Salem witch trials. He was making the point that what was happening in the McCarthy era (hunting for communists) was another manifestation of the witch-burning craze that had happened at a previous time in history.