Pickett's charge
This was an infantry assault ordered by confederate general Lee against union General Maj. Gen. George G. Meade's Union positions on July 3, 1863, which was the last day of the Battle of Gettysburg.The battle resulted to a major victory for the union soldiers and after the battle,the confederate had lost both politically and militarily.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
They would make goods that are Necessary and they would produce them for example : Common goods that people can get from them
(Based off what I learn)
Answer:
They ignored it
Explanation:
The Boland Amendment aimed to prohibit the federal government from providing support to the Contras in Nicaragua. Instead of directly getting involved like that, they decided to ask someone else to support it, and that was Iran. Iran was the subject of an arms embargo which meant that the Contras were able to buy arms (guns) from Iran to overthrow the Nicaraguan government, and this ended up being a political scandal in Reagan's administration.
For Lincoln, allowing American democracy to succeed was compatible with the ideal of freedom; allowing secessionists to destroy it (in response to a democratic election) was not. In other words, Lincoln did not believe that true freedom was letting states do their own thing--and letting the pillars of American constitutional democracy run amok--but instead, in maintaining a union where the great experiment of democracy could flourish. As Lincoln himself said quite clearly in the Gettysburg Address, he was committed to making sure "...that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth." I suppose you can argue that Lincoln's vision of freedom was not worth the price, but you cannot deny that he had a vision of freedom--and that, for him, this vision was compatible with maintaining the historic, unprecedented political freedom that was achieved in 1776.