The correct answer is: "he law would apply to ethnic Chinese regardless of which Asian country they originated from".
The Chinese Exclusion Act was a US federal law enacted by the US goverment presided Chester A. Arthur in 1882. It prohibited Chinese women from migrating to the US, with the ultimate aim of preventing all members from a certain ethinical group or community from establishing themselves in the US.
The amendments introduced in 1884 tightened the previously accepted provisions that enabled former immigrants to leave and then return. After the amendments, they had to meet more strict requirements in order to do so. It also clarified that <u>these rulings were applicable to ethnic Chinese people regardless of which country they were coming from. </u>
Capitalism was a major factor
Answer:
by appointing leaders
Explanation:
The United States of America started out as 13 original colonies. These colonies belonged to the British Empire and were founded during the 17th and 18th centuries.
By the 1700s, the British government controlled its colonies under mercantilism, a system that regulated the balance of trade in favor of Britain. Over time, colonists became frustrated with this unfair economic system and with Britain's administration of taxation of the colonies without any accompanying representation in Britain.
The governments of the colonies were formed in different manners and with various structures. Each colony was set up in a way such that by the mid-1700s, they had a strong capacity for self-government and held local elections. Some early colonial governments foreshadowed elements that would be found in the U.S. government after independence.