In order to maximize profits ,many businessmen in the 19th century resorted to unethical business practices and thus earned the name robber barons.
They did not physically rob people but they stole control over natural resources, paid unfairly low wages and pushed out their competition using questionable business practices .
While their practices weren't viewed as ethical, most of the 19th century robber barons didn't commit any illegal acts, though through their actions, new laws were enacted to prevent others from following their actions.
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The founders viewed the constitution as an agreement between the people and the government that could be broken if the government failed to do its job.
This Enlightenment idea is based on popular sovereignty.
During the Enlightenment, new and innovative ideas about government, society, and people's rights were developed by prominent and bright minds. We are talking about thinkers and philosophers of the Enlightenment such as Baron de Montesquieu, Voltaire, Jhon Lock, and Jean-Jaques Rosseau.
These authors and their ideas influenced later revolutionary movements in Europe and the Americas, as was the case of the Revolutionary War of the 13 colonies, and the French Revolution.
{People were asked to purchase A. War bonds to help the country financially.
Modern weapons would be considered the aspect of the war that causes the largest amount of casualties. The world feared that a Cold War would eventually trig ger another world war wherein the progressive production of nuclear bombs between the superpowers of the United States and Soviet union would lead to huge casualties across the globe.
<span>Foreign investors owned a greater amount US stocks, bonds, and factories than investors in the US owned of assets in foreign markets.
In 1985, the <em>New York Times</em> reported, "U.S. Turns into Debtor Nation," because a Commerce Department report showed the US "owing foreigners more then they owe it." By that they meant that "foreign ownership of American factories, real estate, stocks and bonds exceeded American ownership of foreign assets."
However, there's another way to look at this picture than the "debtor nation" label. The Heritage Foundation (a conservative group) noted in 1985 that having foreign investors pursuing assets in the United States indicated strong confidence by those investors in </span><span>the </span>American<span> economy. You invest in a country's assets because you think those assets will grow in value. So, becoming a "debtor nation" can be viewed as a sign of economic health in the eyes of the rest of the world.</span>