Answer:
Hi! I think is the folk dance
Family Life for Slaves
Slaves marriages and families were not recognised officially by American Law. The owner was free to sell the husbands, wives, children, or siblings of any slave family. Families were often not kept together as large slaveholders had numerous plantations and would shift slaves frequently, which split up families.
10 - 20% of slave marriages were destroyed by the sale. Over a third of all slave children grew up in a household from which one or both parents were absent.
If the family lived on the same plantation, the man could only visit his family if his master let him.
Despite the frequent breakup of families due to the sales, they managed to form strong and durable family/kin ties within the institution. Most slaves married (unofficially) and lived with the same spouse until death. To keep a sense of family identity, children were named after parents, grandparents, or great grandparents etc. as it kept the family strong and together.
Family destruction and dispersal created kinship networks across the country.
The central idea is that people among whom everyone have natural rights have to right to praticipate in process of government du to ability of election reprsentatives and that goverment must secure their rights if government fails to due so peopel have a right to revolt against government.
Absolutely false, if there is little transportation, they wont get much buisness
More than four dozen American hostages were taken at the embassy. The event was titled the Iranian Hostage Crisis. P.S. There's an AWESOME movie about it. It's called "Argo". Check it out! The answer's choice B.