You didn’t add a picture so we can’t answer this.
Jefferson actually wrote to Madison that "a little rebellion every know and then wasn't a bad thing". Jefferson saw rebellions as a way to keep governments on their toes. Small rebellions were good in that they would keep the government honest. They would need to address what caused the rebellion and hopefully make the government better.
Answer:
Four times
Explanation:
Metcalfe's law was developed by George Gilder and is credited to Robert Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet (1980). It refers to the increase in the number of contacts and to the importance.
In spite of the fact that even the Internet, as we understand it today, was not present when the legislation was introduced, it talked more about the importance of computers in general. For eg, it would be pointless to own a mere fax machine. One may connect with another person if there are 2 fax machines, and since there are thousands, the computer has some meaning.
Answer:
If they had met with him four months earlier, they would have encountered a different man. He had run on peace, after all, winning re-election in November 1916 on the slogan “He kept us out of war.” Most Americans had little interest in sending soldiers into the stalemated slaughter that had ravaged the landscapes of Belgium and France since 1914. Wilson, a careful, deliberative former professor, had even tried to convince England and Germany to end World War I through diplomacy throughout 1916. On January 22, speaking before the U.S. Senate, he had proposed a negotiated settlement to the European war, a “peace without victory.”
I think it would be different.
Explanation:
Israel was created as a result of the partition of Palestine