<span>That people have natural rights. And that government is formed by the people. </span>
Answer:
A) Worth the price.
Explanation:
Paine, whose full name is Thomas Paine is the author of the pamphlet Common Sense. The concepts brought up in his writing were originally from England's Englightenment Period, more specifically John Locke. Many people agreed and further developed the idea that liberty is when there is no superior power and a government was responsible for protecting this right [among others]. However, Paine, in his pamphlet argued for the superiority of a republic. A republic, being a government based on the opinions or consent of the governed (public/citizens), is then therefore not superior to the people as the people maintain and voice the system. This way people are free from a single dictator or monarch but are united and can defend their rights if necessary. <u>Anyhow, by writing about ideas of liberty and natural rights in this pamphlet he expressed his view on breaking away from Britain, which was pro and it would be worth it.</u>
2.) The goal of the Committees of Correspondence throughout the Thirteen Colonies was to inform voters of the common threat they faced from their mother country – Britain.
3.)The Intolerable Acts were punitive laws passed by the British Parliament in 1774 after the Boston Tea Party. ... In Great Britain, these laws were referred to as the Coercive Acts.
4.)Boston Massacre, Boston Tea Party, Intolerable Acts
Answer:
colonization of the Americas spurring growth of the sugar industry
Explanation:
The demand for slave labor grew with the growth of the sugar industry in America, mainly in South America. This is because sugar cane farms needed extremely cheap labor, so that profit was optimized. With the failure of the attempt to enslave slaves, Europeans saw blacks as a great option to force work on farms and in the production of sugar.
In other words, the demand for slave labor in the 16th century was due to the colonization of the Americas, stimulating the growth of the sugar industry.
When millions of men left the country to fight in the war, many women worked as replacements for the jobs men previously had before they were drafted. Also, the WAAC (Womens Army Auxiliary Corps) gave women non combat jobs in the army. Since the corps was inactive in combat, it lost its Auxiliary title and became the WAC (Womens Army Corps)