King John keeps the rights and liberties
Th three issues that would definitely violate the privileges and immunities clause of Article IV are the 300-day residency requirement for voting, the denial to sit for the state bar and the 10-year residency requirement for in-state tuition.
The Article IV provides that the Citizen shall be authorized to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in several State.
Answer:
Cottin gin, steam industry and as well as o spinning jenny.
Explanation:
Though im not 100% on o jenny.
The Russian revolutionaries wanted something more than famine and injustice -- and that's much of what existed in Russia at that time. They wanted equality for all persons. That was a big goal of the communist agenda, and the Russian Revolution was a communist endeavor. They wanted to achieve that equality both in terms of wealth/property and in terms of political status and rights.
Was it dangerous? Absolutely. The reign of the tsars had gone on in Russia for centuries, and military victory over the tsar's armies had to be won for the revolution to succeed. And it was not going to be easy to make the nation better off, even after the revolution. The people would expect results from the new government. Those results were going to be hard to achieve.
Over time, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), which was the nation brought about by the Russian Revolution, has to become more and more authoritarian and repressive to keep its agenda going. And eventually that agenda failed, when about 75 years after the revolution, the USSR's government collapsed.
Mao's legacy is subject to great controversy. Many Chinese consider Mao as a great revolutionary, a great leader. They claim their figure, although they admit that they made serious mistakes at the end of their government.
Critics of Mao, however, claim that he achieved successes of great importance. For example, before 1949, the illiteracy rate was 80% and the average life of the population was merely 44 years. At his death, the illiteracy rate had dropped to 20% and the average life increased to 65 years.
Mao argued that socialism was the only answer for China, due, among other arguments, to the fact that Western powers and particularly the United States, would never allow China to advance under a capitalist regime. In fact, this theory was not far from reality, because the United States maintained a trade embargo against the People's Republic of China that lasted until 1972, when Richard Nixon decided that China was a power that should be considered favorably in the Cold War with the Soviet Union.
At present, Mao's follow-up has been drastically reduced in China. In fact, some of his works have been much criticized later. The book Mao: The Unknown History, written by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday, points out that Mao created many myths regarding his achievements and his youth, in order to show himself as the hero of the people. They even claim that some incidents of the Long March, particularly the battle of the Luding Bridge, were totally false.