In general, no, Montesquieu did not think a good way to make laws is for all the people to directly vote on them, since he thought a more efficient way was to have a Republic, in which people elect representatives. <span />
It was racial/ethnic. The Nazis thought
that they were the supreme race and believed that anyone who was below them
deserved to be either imprisoned or exterminated. Jews, Gypsies, Eastern Europeans and all
those they considered inferior were victimized and many suffered as a result.
Answer:
The question does not provide the excerpt but I an safely answer the question.
Memory of the Tiananmen Square in China is largely suppressed. Very few records of the events exist today, and all of them only present the official government version of the events.
Most people born after 1989 do not even know about the Tiananmen square events, and if they do, it's likely that they knowledge is poor.
It is forbidden to discuss anything related to the Tiananmen square in public and in social media, doing so can get people jailed.
The main way in which lawmaking at Jamestown differed from lawmaking at Plymouth was that lawmaking in the former was based primarily on crop cultivated and survival, whereas many of the laws passed in the latter revolved around God, since they were a highly religious colony. <span />
Im sorry
Okay have you thoughr about socialstudieshelp.com