Answer:
Border states
Explanation:
Im not sure if this is correct... But you can try it.
There were three guys who had opened up a private airport in Albuquerque and started operating it. As their business grew, they got the attention of the country and as world war 2 was looming, there was a decision to withdraw all private flights from it and to start working for the government. The Kirtland Air Force Base was built and the airport started getting used for training new pilots for ww2 needs.
The Tet Offensive was considered a turning point in the war because in the Tet Offensive, the VietCong launched a massive counterattack all over allied posts, starting from the North down. It was all planned out and launched within minutes of each other. The U.S. Embassy was infiltrated for about 1-2 days, and when the media reported it and captured images of American soldiers dying, many American people knew that the war was far from over and demanded U.S. troops to withdraw from the war. The media leakage made the U.S. Government look bad because they were lying to the people about the war. After that, the U.S. makes a temporary deal with the VietCong, leader was Ho Chi Minh, and the U.S. slowly withdraws. After the U.S. fully withdrew, the North resumed their attacks, and the South couldn't defend themselves without a strong leader, because Ngo Dinh Diem (leader of South Vietnam) was assassinated and the U.S. were no longer in the war. South Vietnam fell to Communism on April 30, 1975.
Answer:
The factory system replaced the domestic system, in which individual workers used hand tools or simple machinery to fabricate goods in their own homes or in workshops attached to their homes. The use of waterpower and then the steam engine to mechanize processes such as cloth weaving in England in the second half of the 18th century marked the beginning of the factory system. This system was enhanced at the end of the 18th century by the introduction of interchangeable parts in the manufacture of muskets and, subsequently, other types of goods. Prior to this, each part of a musket (or anything else assembled from multiple components) had been individually shaped by a workman to fit with the other parts. In the new system, the musket parts were machined to such precise specifications that a part of any musket could be replaced by the same part from any other musket of the same design. This advance signaled the onset of mass production, in which standardized parts could be assembled by relatively unskilled workmen into complete finished products.
The resulting system, in which work was organized to utilize power-driven machinery and produce goods on a large scale, had important social consequences: formerly, workers had been independent craftsmen who owned their own tools and designated their own working hours, but in the factory system, the employer owned the tools and raw materials and set the hours and other conditions under which the workers laboured. The location of work also changed. Whereas many workers had inhabited rural areas under the domestic system, the factory system concentrated workers in cities and towns, because the new factories had to be located near waterpower and transportation (alongside waterways, roads, or railways). The movement toward industrialization often led to crowded, substandard housing and poor sanitary conditions for the workers. Moreover, many of the new unskilled jobs could be performed equally well by women, men, or children, thus tending to drive down factory wages to subsistence levels. Factories tended to be poorly lit, cluttered, and unsafe places where workers put in long hours for low pay. These harsh conditions gave rise in the second half of the 19th century to the trade-union movement, in which workers organized in an attempt to improve their lot through collective action. (See organized labour.)
Explanation:
I think you are trying to find more about Alexis de Tocqueville who wrote a book with the title you have offered. He was a very keen observer of the American political system.
In 1830, he was sent to America by the French government to study the American prison system, but he was far more interested in the wider aspects of American life and politics. He even spent some time in Canada which is to say what is now Ontario and Quebec.
His travelling partner (a man whose family name was Beaumont) wrote a novel about the injustice of Slavery. de Tocqueville shared Beaumont's outrage at the practice.
But his main contribution was his wide vision of America. In general he was a fan and applauded the way the checks and balances worked and the division of power between the Federal and State governments.