Um,, see in the real world there is no good part of segregation. But lets see if there is a white community, and then a black community with the SAME benefits neither has less than the other, I guess less racism since you're with your own kind.
Answer:
my sister was almost stolen true story
Explanation:
a person came at 3 am in the morning and got my sister she cried waking us up we garbed a gun and he put her down. that was our neighbor so we called the cops as well he didn't go to jail and we were fined for "making up this story and planting evidence" omg how did they bye that garbage from that dush!!!! any way 500 bucks were gone and we steel were kinda poor but 1 month later dad got his new job and now he makes $20,000 a year well $16,000 because of the governments theft but all good. now for the past 14 years hes had that job and now we live in a 3 story house!!! the end.
Europe was made up many different countries all under different leaders and speaking different languages, but the 13 colonies was in one country and they all spoke the same if not similar. Also each country had a king or queen whereas the 13 colonies didn't have this. Another reason is that in the 13 colonies there wasn't a problem with moving to another state or colony. Hope this helped!
Answer:
Hope this helps:
Explanation:
The surrender of Montreal on September 8, 1760 signaled an end to all major military operations between Britain in France in North America during the French and Indian War. Although the guns had fallen silent in Canada and the British colonies, it was still yet to be determined just how or when the Seven Years’ War, still raging throughout the world, would end. What resulted from this global conflict and the French and Indian War shaped the future of North America.
By 1762, the Seven Years’ War, fought in Europe, the Americas, West Africa, India, and the Philippines, had worn the opposing sides in the conflict down. The combatants (Britain, Prussia, and Hanover against France, Spain, Austria, Saxony, Sweden, and Russia) were ready for peace and a return to the status quo. Imperialist members of the British Parliament did not want to yield the territories gained during the war, but the other faction believed that it was necessary to return a number of France’s antebellum holdings in order to maintain a balance of power in Europe. This latter measure would not, however, include France’s North American territories and Spanish Florida.
On February 10, 1763, over two years after the fighting had ended in North America, hostilities officially ceased with the signing of the Treaty of Paris between Britain, France, and Spain. The fate of America’s future had been placed on a new trajectory, and as famously asserted by 19th century historian, Francis Parkman, “half the continent had changed hands at the scratch of a pen.” France’s North American empire had vanished.