Since this answer depends on where you live, I'll just make a nice little example you can go off of! My little home has representatives such as but not limited to Lou Barletta, Ryan Costello, Glenn Thompson, Connor Lamb, Brian Fitzpatrick, and my favorite of all Mike Kelly. If it troubles you too much google your nearby representatives and what they do individually! Good day
America's foreign policy during the Cold War was "containment". This policy was the idea of preventing communism from spreading to countries across the world.
The way that America did this was primarily by funding capitalist/democratic nations around the world (South Korea and South Vietnam specifically). America would fun these nations and their armies while supporting them in the war efforts. This led the the Vietnamese and Korean Wars.
The problem is that, in funding these nations, the opposing nations (North Vietnam and North Korea) suffered. They ended up having to take funding from large communist nations (USSR and China) in order to protect themselves. When smaller nations have to ally with large nations, they often times end up acting as tools for them, being used to spread their ideas.
America's foreign policy of containment during the Cold War led to the trampling of freedoms through their funding of the nations who supported their ideals. I think you should write about those facts and highlight the way that America used the smaller nations as their tools to convert the communist nations to capitalist/democratic nations.
(I only wrote about Vietnam and Korean because they are the largest examples of this and the examples that I am most familiar with, but I'm sure there are other examples in other parts of the world).
Answer: True but just read the bottom of explination
Explanation: Jazz has all the elements that other music has: It has melody; that's the tune of the song, the part you're most likely to remember. It has harmony, the notes that make the melody sound fuller. It has rhythm, which is the heartbeat of the song. But what sets jazz apart is this cool thing called improvisation
Answer:Hope This Helps
Explanation:
On February 4, 1887, both the Senate and House passed the Interstate Commerce Act, which applied the Constitution’s “Commerce Clause”—granting Congress the power “to Regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States”—to regulating railroad rates. Small businesses and farmers were protesting that the railroads charged them higher rates than larger corporations, and that the railroads were also setting higher rates for short hauls than for long-distance hauls. Although the railroads claimed economic justification for policies that favored big businesses, small shippers insisted that the railroads were gouging them.
It took years for Congress to respond to these protests, due to members’ reluctance to have the government interfere in any way with corporate policies. In 1874 legislation was introduced calling for a federal railroad commission. The bill passed the House, but not the Senate. When Congress failed to act, some states adopted their own railroad regulations. Those laws were struck down in 1886, when the Supreme Court ruled in that the state of Illinois could not restrict the rates that the Wabash Railroad was charging because its freight traffic moved between the states, and only the federal government could regulate interstate commerce. Continued public anger over unfair railroad rates prompted Illinois senator Shelby M. Cullom to hold the hearings that led to the enactment of the Interstate Commerce Act.
That law limited railroads to rates that were “reasonable and just,” forbade rebates to high-volume users, and made it illegal to charge higher rates for shorter hauls. To hear evidence and render decisions on individual cases, the act created the Interstate Commerce Commission. This was the first federal independent regulatory commission, and it served as a model for others that would follow, from the Federal Trade Commission to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Evolving technology eventually made the purpose of the ICC obsolete, and in 1995 Congress abolished the commission, transferring its remaining functions to the Surface Transportation Board. But while the ICC has come and gone, its creation marked a significant turning point in federal policy. Before 1887, Congress had applied the Commerce Clause only on a limited basis, usually to remove barriers that the states tried to impose on interstate trade. The Interstate Commerce Act showed that Congress could apply the Commerce Clause more expansively to national issues if they involved commerce across state lines. After 1887, the national economy grew much more integrated, making almost all commerce interstate and international. The nation rather than the Constitution had changed. That development turned the Commerce Clause into a powerful legislative tool for addressing national problems.
Answer:Southerners who took an oath of loyalty would be pardoned and have land returned to them.
Explanation:I’m doing the test and I think it’s this one and if I’m wrong I’ll just put the answer in a comment. Good luck!