You didn't list any of the possible outcomes, so I'll list all of the reasons the Han Dynasty DID fall.
If any of the answer choices include things I listed, it is not the correct answer and therefore through the process of elimination you should find the correct answers.
The Han Dynasty fell for these reasons:
- Internal Forces / Corruption - Taxation within the Empire - The Steppe Societies / The Huns - Warlords and breaking into regions - Disease - Political Problems - Inability to maintain the order of the public - Lords wanted more land, the government gave, wanted more so killed neighbors
Ralph had surely learned about the virtues of democracy, good governance and accountability. Then Watergate happened and he, just like millions of Americans, saw and listened to president Nixon lying and obstructing justice after having abused his power to spy on his political rivals. The Watergate scandal erosioned the credibility of the political system and of the institution of the presidency. So, Ralph became dissapointed.
In stateless societies there is little concentration of authority, most positions of authority that exist are very limited in their power and such positions are usually not permanently occupied, and social agencies resolve disputes through Predefined rules tend to be small. Stateless societies are very variable in economic organization, and cultural practices. Most of the history of mankind people have lived in stateless societies. However, few Stateless societies exist at present, since most of them have been obliged to integrate with the state-level companies that surround them.
The Monarchy is a form of State (although it is often defined as a form of Government) in which a group integrated into the State, usually a family that represents a dynasty, embodies the national identity of the country and its head, the monarch, He exercises the role of head of state. The political power of the monarch can vary from the purely symbolic (parliamentary monarchy), to integrate in the form of government: with considerable but restricted executive powers (constitutional monarchy), even the completely autocratic (absolute monarchy).