There are some trees near my home. It is just like a tiny forest, except the fact that there are no dangerous wild animals. But still I can see various kinds of birds, squirrels and when I am lucky, even rabbits. No one except me goes there. So, that place is totally mine. I can do whatever I want. There is a Berry tree there, I sometimes eat those purple berries too. It feels strangely safe there even when I am surrounded by various types of insects and even when I am sitting under a tree that has a nest of an owl. Whenever I go there, I can hear the chirp of birds, sound of woodpecker and sound of myself walking on the soft bed of dried leaves. When I sit under my favourite Berry tree, I am surrounded by the fruity fragrance of berries. Otherwise there are various kind of smells that I can't describe. It is the best place. If I am given the choice to spend my summers either in Australia or in my tiny forest, I will choose my tiny forest.
Answer: Popular Sovereignty
Explanation:
Prior to the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the slave status of a new territory would be decided by the Missouri Compromise which based the state's slave status on geographical location as it prohibited slavery in states to the North of the 36°30′ parallel (excluding Missouri).
In 1854 however, a bill that would later be known as the Kansas-Nebraska Act was introduced to Congress by Sen. Stephen A. Douglas who hoped to gain support from Southern politicians for a state to be established on land gained from the Louisiana purchase.
The bill called for the status of a state to be decided by Popular Sovereignty which essentially meant that the people of the state would decide whether or not they wanted to be a free state instead of Congress as had previously been the case.
With this act therefore, the new territories would decide their status by themselves.
Answer:
War Dogs is a 2016 American dark comedy-crime film directed by Todd Phillips and written by Phillips, Jason Smilovic and Stephen Chin, based on a 2011 Rolling Stone article by Guy Lawson,[5] as well as Efraim Diveroli's 2016 memoir Once a Gun Runner as outlined in an ongoing lawsuit.[6][7] Lawson then wrote a 2015 book, Arms and the Dudes, detailing the story.[8] The film follows two arms dealers, Efraim Diveroli and David Packouz, who receive a U.S. Army contract to supply ammunitions for the Afghan National Army worth approximately $300 million.[9] The film is heavily fictionalized and dramatized,[10][11] and some of its events, such as the duo driving through Iraq, were either invented or based on other events, such as screenwriter Stephen Chin's own experiences.
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Answer:
I am pretty sure it is B). Sorry if I am wrong :-)
Explanation:
Cowardly matches what the sentence is trying to say.