Answer: True
Explanation:
Countries across the world have woken up to the importance of Foreign Direct Investment and it's role in Development.
They have watched successful countries like China, Singapore and Japan acquire wealth through FDI and want that success.
The United Nations has noted that for this reason countries have passed laws making it easier to engage in FDI and this is very evident with the presence of huge Multinational Companies.
Those in the upper-class tend to hoard resources and be less generous than they could be.
But the differences between people of upper and lower-classes seems to be the product of the cultural environment, not ingrained traits. Studies have found that as people rise in the classes, they become less empathetic.
Hello. You forgot to put the text to which this question refers. The text is:
The Predominance of the Anglo-Saxon Race
Excerpted from Josiah Strong 1891
The Anglo-Saxon race is the greatest representation of Christian civilization, liberty, and freedom. We are divinely commissioned to watch over our brothers. God is training his Anglo-Saxon people to prepare for a day when the races of the world will compete for total domination. We are being schooled for the final competition of races. Once there was unpopulated land in the western world in which a great many people have migrated. There is no New World anymore. Today unoccupied lands are disappearing, and will soon be taken. Therefore it is our responsibility to seize these lands and secure our dominance.
Answer:
The text shows that it is the responsibility of civilized people to take other lands and integrate them into the Anglo-Saxon domain.
Explanation:
The text portrayed a common vision of European imperialists, who saw themselves as envoys of God and representatives of his power, being able to conquer other lands even though there were already inhabitants and an established government. They believed that land was God's inheritance for them and it was their responsibility to take that land and add it to the imperialist kingdoms.
Answer:
<u>The Arab–Israeli conflict refers to the political tension, military conflicts and disputes between Arab countries and Israel, which climaxed during the 20th century.</u> The roots of the Arab–Israeli conflict are attributed to the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism towards the end of the 19th century, though the two national movements had not clashed until the 1920s. Part of the dispute arised from the conflicting claims to the land. Territory regarded by the Jewish people as their ancestral homeland is at the same time regarded by the Pan-Arab movement as historically and currently belonging to the Arab Palestinians,[8] and in the Pan-Islamic context, as Muslim lands. The sectarian conflict between Palestinian Jews and Arabs emerged in the 1920s, peaking into a full-scale civil war in 1947 and transforming into the First Arab–Israeli War in May 1948, following the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Large-scale hostilities mostly ended with the cease-fire agreements after the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Peace agreements were signed between Israel and Egypt in 1979, resulting in Israeli withdrawal from consequent unilateral annexation of the Golan Heights and East Jerusalem. The nature of the conflict has shifted over the years from the large-scale, the Sinai Peninsula and abolishment of the military governance system in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, in favor of Israeli Civil Administration and regional Arab–Israeli conflict to a more local Israeli–Palestinian conflict, which peaked during the 1982 Lebanon War. With the decline of the First Palestinian Intifada, the interim Oslo Accords led to the creation of the Palestinian National Authority in 1994, within the context of the Israeli–Palestinian peace process. The same year Israel and Jordan reached a peace accord. A cease-fire has been largely maintained between Israel and Baathist Syria, as well as with Lebanon. Despite the peace agreements with Egypt and Jordan, interim peace accords with the Palestinian Authority and the generally existing cease-fire, until mid-2010s the Arab League and Israel had remained at odds with each other over many issues.
Developments in the course of the Syrian Civil War reshuffled the situation near Israel's northern border, putting the Syrian Arab Republic, Hezbollah and the Syrian opposition at odds with each other and complicating their relations with Israel, upon the emerging warfare with Iran. The conflict between Israel and Hamas-ruled Gaza, is also attributed to the Iran–Israel proxy conflict in the region. By 2017, Israel and several Arab Sunni states led by Saudi Arabia, formed a semi-official coalition to confront Iran - a move which some marked as the fading of the Arab-Israeli Conflict.
<h2>(you only need the bold underlined at the beginning)</h2>
Woman Can Vote = United States
2. Roman Republic and USA
3 Roman Republic
4 United states