Answer:
Amendments IV-VIII (4-8) all deal with the legal rights of American citizens.
Explanation:
Amendment IV protects individuals from unreasonable searches and seizures. This means that in most cases, a law enforcement agency must have a warrant in order to search an individuals property. Amendment V protects citizens from self incrimination and double jeopardy. This means that individuals cannot be tried for the exact same crime twice. This prevents government harassment of citizens. Amendment VI ensures that citizens have the right to a fair and speedy public trial. Amendment VII ensures that citizens involved in a civil case have the opportunity to have their case tried in front of a jury of their peers. Amendment VIII prevents the government or law enforcement agencies from setting an excessive bail amount.
Answer:
Summary. In the 1930s, the Japanese controlled the Manchurian railway. In September 1931, they claimed that Chinese soldiers had sabotaged the railway, and attacked the Chinese army. By February 1932, the Japanese had conquered the whole of Manchuria.
The historians could be wrong without proper proof to back up their so-called "facts". Therefore, they would need to study and know what they're talking about, before presenting their statements as facts.
It was an act of the congress of the confederation of the United States, hoped that answered your question :)
During the (first) American revolution, soldiers who joined the Continental Army during the spring or summer but went AWOL in the fall or winter were known as "summer soldiers".
<span>Many of the "summer soldiers" were farmers who would join up with the Army when their crops were planted, fight with them during the summer, and go back home to help with the harvest. Others would stay with the Army through the harvest, but sneak off in the middle of the night once the weather got cold. </span>
<span>Meanwhile, the people who supported the revolutionaries when the revolution was going well -- but not otherwise -- were called "sunshine patriots". </span>
<span>So in the famous passage from "The Crisis" where Thomas Paine wrote: </span>
<span>The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country </span>
<span>he was talking -- quite literally in the former case -- about the fair-weather friends of the Revolution.</span>