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Maslowich
3 years ago
11

Which word best describes Thomas Paine's tone in "The Crisis, No. 1"? mysterious pragmatic inspirational magnanimous elusive

History
2 answers:
artcher [175]3 years ago
7 0
Inspirational seems to be the right one
denis23 [38]3 years ago
6 0
The word that best describes Thomas Paine's tone in "The Crisis No. 1" is INSPIRATIONAL.
His work calls out to everyone of his readers to become inspired and take action against subtle attack from the British that will be done in any way possible. His tone inspires people not only to accept what they are told but to think for themselves and act on their decisions.
 
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Who assisted James Monroe in the writing of the Monroe doctrine?
netineya [11]

Two things had been uppermost in the minds of Adams and Monroe. In 1821 the Russian czar had proclaimed that all the area north of the fifty-first parallel and extending one hundred miles into the Pacific would be off-limits to non-Russians. Adams had refused to accept this claim, and he told the Russian minister that the United States would defend the principle that the ‘American continents are no longer subjects of any new European colonial establishments.’

More worrisome, however, was the situation in Central and South America. Revolutions against Spanish rule had been under way for some time, but it seemed possible that Spain and France might seek to reassert European rule in those regions. The British, meanwhile, were interested in ensuring the demise of Spanish colonialism, with all the trade restrictions that Spanish rule involved. British foreign secretary George Canning formally proposed, therefore, that London and Washington unite on a joint warning against intervention in Latin America. When the Monroe cabinet debated the idea, Adams opposed it, arguing that British interests dictated such a policy in any event, and that Canning’s proposal also called upon the two powers to renounce any intention of annexing such areas as Cuba and Texas. Why should the United States, he asked, appear as a cockboat trailing in the wake of a British man-of-war?

In the decades following Monroe’s announcement, American policymakers did not invoke the doctrine against European powers despite their occasional military ‘interventions’ in Latin America. Monroe’s principal concern had been to make sure that European mercantilism not be reimposed on an area of increasing importance economically and ideologically to the United States. When, however, President John Tyler used the doctrine in 1842 to justify seizing Texas, a Venezuelan newspaper responded with what would become an increasingly bitter theme throughout Latin America: ‘Beware, brothers, the wolf approaches the lambs.’

Secretary of State William H. Seward attempted a bizarre use of the doctrine in 1861 in hopes of avoiding the Civil War. The United States, said Seward, in order to divert attention from the impending crisis, should challenge supposed European interventions in the Western Hemisphere by launching a drive to liberate Cuba and end the last vestiges of colonialism in the Americas. President Lincoln turned down the idea.

In the 1890s, the United States, once again by unilateral action, extended the doctrine to include the right to decide how a dispute between Venezuela and Great Britain over the boundaries of British Guiana should be settled. Secretary of State Richard Olney told the British, ‘Today the United States is practically sovereign on this continent and its fiat is law upon the subjects to which it confines its interposition…. its infinite resources combined with its isolated position render it master of the situation and practically invulnerable as against any or all other powers.’ The British, troubled by the rise of Germany and Japan, could only acquiesce in American pretensions. But Latin American nations protested the way in which Washington had chosen to ‘defend’ Venezuelan interests.

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How did the Clayton Antitrust benefit labor?
rusak2 [61]
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Which best describes the organization of Phoenicia?
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Phoenicia was a collection of city-states.


Please mark as brainlist if correct! It'd mean a lot! Have a blessed day!
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4 years ago
In what specific ways did fears about tyranny and abuse of power lead to the revolutionary war and impact debates in the first d
Genrish500 [490]

The correct answer to this open question is the following.

Although there are no options attached, we can say the following.

The ways in that fears about tyranny and abuse of power led to the revolutionary war and impact debates in the first decades of the Republic were the following.

The American colonists were tired, upset, and infuriated by the many aggressions, injustices, and heavy taxation imposed by the English monarchy on the 13 colonies.

More and more, the Patriots were willing and able to demand the independence of the colonies from the government of England. They were mad at the taxation such as the Navigation Acts, the Stamp Act, or the Tea Act, and many more. The Boston Massacre was another incident in which British troops attacked the colonists in Boston.

And to make things worst, colonists did not have any voice or representation in the British Parliament.

Colonists were tired from the tyranny of the English king and that is why they started the Revolutionary War of independence against Britain.

6 0
3 years ago
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