I think it’s b i don’t know tho
This question is referring to the historical Buddha, also known as Gautama Buddha or Siddhartha Gautama, among other names, whose teachings were the origin of Buddhism. He was born into a noble family and, as a young man, he had a very pleasurable existence, but after leaving his palace one day and seeing an old man, a sick man, and a dead man, he soon realized that those pleasures were momentary and superficial, and that no one could avoid sickness, age, and death. For that reason, he decided to renounce his princely life and quested for nirvana, the termination of all sickness, death, and old age, which, after living a very ascetic life for a few years, he attained practicing the Middle Way, which convinced him of rejecting both self-indulgence and self-denial. This eventually led him to Enlightenment, which turned him into the Buddha. He spent the rest of his life teaching others.
Answer:
3 branches :)
Explanation:
Montesquieu concluded that the best form of government was one in which the legislative, executive, and judicial powers were separate and kept each other in check to prevent any branch from becoming too powerful.
The answer is:
D. slowed the arms race between the Soviet Union and the United States.
Divided in two rounds of conversations the Strategic Arms Limitations Treaty (SALT) were a couple of treaties that were held between the USA and the URSS to find a way to keep the armmamentary race undercontrol. There were a lot of issues to be discussed, anti-ballistic misiles zones, that stated that only one was allowed by country which meant that the countries would only have this for the capitol, it slowed down the arms race up to the end of the cold war.
Answer:
No.
Explanation:
Communism always led to totalitarianism and Tyranny, and ends with absolutism and destruction of the rights of the people.
What you are talking about is Democracy, in which direct democracy allows citizens to vote for leader candidates directly, while indirect democracy allows citizens to vote for voters, who in turn cast votes for the candidacy of office.
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