No because they should of stayed in England
Answer:
big stick policy refers to President Theodore Roosevelt's foreign policy speak softly and carry a big stick you will go far Roosevelt described his style of foreign policy as the exercise of intelligent forethought and of decisive action sufficiently far in advance
Explanation:
The correct answer is the Stamp Act, Boston Tea Party, Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation adopted and Constitution adopted
Explanation:
To place events in chronological order implies organizing them according to time especially from the oldest event to the most recent. According to this, form the options give the Stamp Act would be the first event as this occurred in 1765 as taxes and restrictions were imposed by the British crown on papers and other products, this event was followed by the Boston Tea Party in 1773 in which colonizers opposed the restrictions previously imposed. Additionally, the conflict between colonists and England led to the Civil War and later to the Declaration of Independence in 1776 and with this the Articles of Confederation ere adopted in 1781 and later replaced by the Constitution in 1789.
Over time, the Soviet Union would either soften in its stance or would break apart from the internal contradictions of its system.
One of the things George Kennan said in his "long telegram" (8,000 words) sent in 1946 was that the USSR's overall methods of propaganda and control were negative and destructive. "It should therefore be relatively easy to combat it by any intelligent and really constructive program," he said. Urging a policy of containment rather than direct confrontation with the Soviet Union was a plan for waiting the nation to change in a positive direction or fail because it could not maintain control of its own system. Kennan said, "<span>Success of Soviet system, as form of internal power, is not yet finally proven. It has yet to be demonstrated that it can survive supreme test of successive transfer of power from one individual or group to another. ... Internal soundness and permanence of movement need not yet be regarded as assured."</span>