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olya-2409 [2.1K]
4 years ago
8

Which statement summarizes the message in the Supreme Court's Dred Scott decision?I

History
1 answer:
alukav5142 [94]4 years ago
5 0
B enslaved african americans has the rights of citizens
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Can someone please right a 4-6 paragraph essay about The Golden Age of Islam
tamaranim1 [39]

Answer:

Islam as a religion began with the message which was spread by Islam’s Prophet and God’s Messenger Muhammad ibn Abdallah in the Arabian Peninsula in 610 CE and which was contained in the Qur’an, God’s revelation to Muhammad. After Muhammad’s death in 632, his followers, the Muslims, embarked on successive waves of conquest of the Middle East and beyond; within less than a century, they had political and military control of virtually all the lands between India and Spain. The exercise of this control came from a state that was called the caliphate, its ruler being viewed as the caliph, or “successor,” to the Prophet Muhammad. In the first few decades, the state, based in Arabia, was simple and its ruler elected on the basis of merit. However, following the expansion, it soon turned into a complex, multi-national empire ruled by dynasties based in Syria first (the Umayyads, 661-750 CE) and then in Iraq (the Abbasids, 750-1258 CE). The caliphal system became weakened in the later ninth century, and by the tenth century, real power had moved to several local dynasties although the caliph remained the nominal head of the empire. The Abbasid empire and most of the local dynasties were overrun and practically destroyed by the Mongol invasion of the Middle East in 1258. That invasion ended not only the early phase of Islamic history, but also the “Golden Age” of Islamic civilization, which had been developing slowly from the beginning of this period. The “Golden Age” refers to the period when the varied contributions of Islamic civilization reached their peak in both the indigenous Islamic disciplines (such as Islamic law) and the newly imported disciplines of late antiquity (such as philosophy).

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
What is a main reason the Creeks fought for sovereign rights?
avanturin [10]

Answer:

Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool. Boy I am cool.

Explanation:

7 0
3 years ago
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The law of supply demonstrates the behaviors of producers when they
Mamont248 [21]

The correct answer is:

C) Supply goods to consumers.  

The law of supply is a microeconomic principle about the production level that suppliers can manufacture at different selling prices. It states that keeping other factors constant, as the price of a product or service rises, the production will rise, and vice versa. This means that suppliers will produce more of a product if the profit is known to be higher.

6 0
4 years ago
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Why did the United States shift from territorial acquisition to a sphere of influence strategy? Illustrate both sorts of strateg
n200080 [17]

Answer:

Examples for a territorial acquisiton can be seen in the Mexican-American and Spanish-American Wars, with both ending in the annexation of new territories to the USA; while the use of a sphere of influence can be seen in the Venezuelan Crisis of 1902-1903, the building of the Panama Canal in 1903, and the interventions in the Caribbean (Nicaragua, Dominican Republic). The principal reason for the sphere of influence policy was first that the USA did not intended to maintain an empire as the European powers (in fact many condemmned the annexation of Hawaii and the Philippines) for, to the public imaginarum, the USA was, and still is, a non interventionist-imperialist power, and more of a democratic, liberty guide. More prosaic, the cost of mantaining colonies was a deterrant, with the US government deciding the infuence of the USA was more effective through economic means, but not ruling out military intervention.

This was the reason for the issuing of the Corollary after the beforementioned Venezuelan  Crisis, asserting the new fact of the USA as the dominant power in the region. The Roosevelt Corollary manifest that the USA was the ultimate arbitrater between the European powers and the Western Hemisphere republics, therefore it manifested an interventionist view, rather than a "brotherhood" which can be seen as the original sense of the Monroe Doctrine.

Race and democracy were a key factor of the US policy, as an eurocentric and eugenesic view of the political process was the rule. This was reflected on the contempt of the Latin American countries, viewing them as "degraded" due to the mixing of races, and justifying the instability of their political institutions with that argument, mixing this view with a paternalistic trait, which was the inspiration for the "Big Stick" policy of Roosevelt.

The United States did not helped establish democracy in Latin America primarily because it profitted from the lack of it. This was mirrored in the Caribbean basin, Central America and Mexico. It was not a conspiracy, but American companies profitted better with the autocrats that ruled this republics, and even after American intervention, the goal of foreign policy was "stability", which in many cases lead to the support of Strongmen (Porfirio Diaz in Mexico, Manuel Estrada Cabrera in Guatemala) or direct intervention (the Banana Wars in Haiti and Nicaragua).

Latin American republics responded to this imperialism with both collaborationist and resistance movements.. The first was seen in Mexico and Guatemala (the strongmen lended lands and military grants to the US) while in Nicaragua and Haiti resistance movements were born (Augusto Cesar Sandino in Nicaragua being the most famous).

If one seemed to work was the creation of dictatorial regimes, which were perfected in the 1930's, when strong autocrats infested Latin American (and specifically the Caribbean and Central American Region). Leonidas Trujillo in Dominican Republic, Anastasio Somoza in Nicaragua, Jorge Ubico in Guatemala, Papa Doc Duvalier in Haiti. This "stability" gained through collaboration with the US imperialism and autocratic power was one of the reasons for the use of the "Good Neighbor" policy by Franklin Roosevelt. This was the last act of the reassertation of the sphere of influence policy.

8 0
3 years ago
Which modern country has undergone the most dramatic territorial changes between 1650 and the present? Spain England France Germ
Igoryamba
The correct answer is:

Germany

I hope this answer was helpful!! :)
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3 years ago
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