Brainliest Please
The correct answer is:
Answers will vary. Most students might note that it was necessary for Jefferson to prove
that the Continental Congress presented a united front to the world in order to prove that
independence was the true goal of the colonies. Others may state that since each state
provided signers to the document, it was obvious that all thirteen colonies accepted it.
As to the question of whether the 13 colonies could have declared independence if they
weren’t unanimous, answers will vary. Most students might state that independence
would be difficult without the support of all thirteen colonies, but some might say
independence without consensus was still possible. For instance, colonies that objected
could be absorbed into Canada or find a way to peacefully co-exist with those that
seceded.
Resources here: https://www-tc.pbs.org/ktca/liberty/pdf/2_questions_answers.pdf
Answer:
B. ITS B I HOPED IT HELPS
Explanation:
It's most likely that the Mayans abandoned their cities but no one knows why
Intolerable Acts, or Coercive Acts... the two parties called it two different names. The British (or the loyalists) put these acts upon the Colonists (or the patriots) to punish them for the acts of dumping the tea into the water, which was a large trading resource at the time. To give you a bit more history, they dressed up as Indians in the process of dumping to tea... Later on after they were going to be punished... the Patriots spread propaganda about what happened...( kind of the same thing with the Massacre, only 5 people were killed. But the colonists made it seem like it was a mass killing).
Answer: d. a letter from the Spanish ambassador
Explanation: On February 9th 1898, The Spanish ambassador Enrique Dupuy de Lôme wrote a letter to the Foreign Minister of Spain, Don José Canalejas in the letter, de Lôme’s opinion about the Spanish involvement in Cuba and the diplomacy of US President McKinley’s was revealed.
In the letter, the Spanish ambassador Enrique Dupuy de Lôme criticized American President William McKinley by calling him weak and concerned only with gaining the favor of the crowd.
The words contained in the publicized seized Spanish letter caused an international uproar which contributed in the anti-Spanish and pro-war feelings in the United States.
The publication of the letter generated a lot of public support for a war against Spain concerning independence for the Spanish colony of Cuba.