I would say B personally. IT takes quite alot to grow rice and tobacco from what i know.
<span>Jean Piaget viewed intellectual growth in children as a process of adjustment to the world. This happens through thru assimilation, accommodation, and equilibration. For the 18th-month-old Mickey, his reaction (identifying and shouting to zebras as horses) is best demonstrated by Piaget’s concept of assimilation. Assimilation means the use of existing schema or mental model (zebra) to deal with the new object (horse) or situation. </span>
Russia offered to sell Alaska in 1859 because they were in debt from the Crimean War. The U.S. did not initially make this purchase because of Civil War debts.
At the time of the purchase, America was still in a expansive mood. No one knew of any resources in Alaska then. Oil was not a big one for anyone. Alaska was even called "Stewart's Folly" (Stewart was a secretary of the interior) and a waste of federal money. (The dang place went for about 10 cents per square mile!)
Stewart wanted to simplify the map of North America and to block the British in Canada from further expansion as the USA and the British Empire were still not the best of friends.
Also, the Russians felt they could never have a firm hold on such a distance colony, needed some cash in a hurry because of a pending war with the Ottoman Empire and the Tzar on the throne at the time was a bit wacky.
It was strictly a move by the USA to secure the last major piece of real estate still open in North America.
I hope this helps:)
Television can create a shared experience and a feeling that people are members of a collective, despite lacking in proximity to one another. This is called:<u> Imagined communities</u>
<h3>What is Imagined communities?</h3>
In his 1983 book Imagined Communities, Benedict Anderson introduced the idea of an imagined community as a way to examine nationalism. According to Anderson, a country is a socially constructed community that its citizens who identify as belonging to a particular group imagine.
<h3>What does the concept imagined communities refer to?</h3>
Imagined communities are groups of people who all identify as part of a single community even if they may never interact with the majority of the other group members.
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The correct answer is the perceptions of the organizational
politics. This is defined as the nature of the work environments by which it is
being discussed that includes situational and personal factors that affects the
perceptions of the organizational politics.