Answer:
The two correct answers are Option A and Option C.
Explanation:
It was first introduced in Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points and it was established to encourage peace negotiations as World War I came to an end and afterward. Woodrow Wilson was the President of the United States and the League of Nations was his idea, but he could not get the United States Congress to approve membership for the United States due to isolationist beliefs among the representatives. Wilson's health also began to decline so he was unable to make strong personal appeals to the US Congress in favor of the treaty.
Answer:
Due to economy and number of workers.
Explanation:
The colonial workers earn lower wages than Europeans because of the economy of the state as well as presence of large number of workers in the colony as compared to Europeans. Supply of materials plays a key role for its price. If the supply for a material increases, its price also decreases due to excess quantity. There are limited workers in the Europe and they have a strong economy due to which Europeans workers have high wages as compared to colonial workers.
Answer: The charter contained contradictions, Religious liberty was guaranteed, except for Roman Catholicism and Judaism, A group of Jews landed in Georgia without explicit permission in 1733 but were allowed to remain, and The charter created a corporate body called a Trust and provided for an unspecified number of Trustees who would govern the colony from England.
America today uses some of the same technology/techniques that were founded in the gilded age. Another similarity is also that social statuses still have a big role in people’s lives.
The correct statements are:
- A. The Declaration of Independence speaks of a Divine Creator and The Declaration of the Rights of Man speaks of a Supreme Being.
- C. Both documents drew on the natural law philosophy of John Locke.
Some additional details about the "Divine Creator" and "Supreme Being" distinction:
The Declaration of Independence (1776) famously asserted, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." America's founding fathers tended to speak in religious terms associated with the Christian tradition, even though a number of them were more like Deists in their own beliefs. Deists believe that there is a God who created the world, but set it up to run by natural laws and did not intervene in a personal way in its operation.
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen (1789) was less overt in ascribing the rights of human beings to God as Creator. That declaration of the French Revolution stated, "The National Assembly recognizes and proclaims, in the presence and under the auspices of the Supreme Being, the following rights of man and of the citizen." They were using more overtly Deist language, acknowledging a Supreme Being that was the reasonable force governing all things, but seeing human beings in society granting rights according to the actions of a just government.