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aalyn [17]
3 years ago
7

How did Chinese communist strategist for political revolution differ from soviet communist strategy

History
1 answer:
GarryVolchara [31]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

If there are options to answer from this question and I am thinking of the correct answers from the book then it is: The Chinese focused on organizing peasants and the Soviets focused on organized factory workers.

Explanation:

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I SWEAR IF YOU CAN HELP I WILL GIVE YOU BRANLIEST 20 One viewpoint was suggested by _______________ and was called the _________
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Answer: breanna here

July 16, 1987, began with a light breeze, a cloudless sky, and a spirit of celebration. On that day, 200 senators and representatives boarded a special train for a journey to Philadelphia to celebrate a singular congressional anniversary.

Exactly 200 years earlier, the framers of the U.S. Constitution, meeting at Independence Hall, had reached a supremely important agreement. Their so-called Great Compromise (or Connecticut Compromise in honor of its architects, Connecticut delegates Roger Sherman and Oliver Ellsworth) provided a dual system of congressional representation. In the House of Representatives each state would be assigned a number of seats in proportion to its population. In the Senate, all states would have the same number of seats. Today, we take this arrangement for granted; in the wilting-hot summer of 1787, it was a new idea.

In the weeks before July 16, 1787, the framers had made several important decisions about the Senate’s structure. They turned aside a proposal to have the House of Representatives elect senators from lists submitted by the individual state legislatures and agreed that those legislatures should elect their own senators.

By July 16, the convention had already set the minimum age for senators at 30 and the term length at six years, as opposed to 25 for House members, with two-year terms. James Madison explained that these distinctions, based on “the nature of the senatorial trust, which requires greater extent of information and stability of character,” would allow the Senate “to proceed with more coolness, with more system, and with more wisdom than the popular[ly elected] branch.”

The issue of representation, however, threatened to destroy the seven-week-old convention. Delegates from the large states believed that because their states contributed proportionally more to the nation’s financial and defensive resources, they should enjoy proportionally greater representation in the Senate as well as in the House. Small-state delegates demanded, with comparable intensity, that all states be equally represented in both houses. When Sherman proposed the compromise, Benjamin Franklin agreed that each state should have an equal vote in the Senate in all matters—except those involving money.

Over the Fourth of July holiday, delegates worked out a compromise plan that sidetracked Franklin’s proposal. On July 16, the convention adopted the Great Compromise by a heart-stopping margin of one vote. As the 1987 celebrants duly noted, without that vote, there would likely have been no Constitution.

Explanation:

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3 years ago
In the U.S. Supreme Court case of The Cherokee Nation vs Georgia (1831),
AlexFokin [52]

Answer:

2) the cherokee were not considered citizens and did not have the right to bring a case to the federal court

Explanation:

In the U.S. Supreme Court case of The Cherokee Nation vs Georgia (1831),

the court ruled that it did not have jurisdiction in the case because the Cherokees were not considered citizens and had no right to bring a case to a federal court.

The proceeding was presided over by Justice Marshall who said the Cherokees were a dependent nation.

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