Answer:
"Upon retirement as the Governor of both the Vancouver Island and British Columbia colonies in the spring of 1864, Queen Victoria honoured James Douglas by making him a Knight. Officially he was made a Knight Commander of The Most Honourable Order of the Bath. He was given this award for the “performance of public personal duties to the crown that have merited royal favour.” The appointment of a knighthood to “Sir” James Douglas, as he was now known, was high recognition for Douglas, who emerged from humble origins as the son of a Scottish merchant and Creole woman in British Guiana. “Sir James Douglas’s career as governor has been a remarkable one,” an official at the Colonial Office acknowledged." — govlet.ca
This group member is exhibiting "<span>social loafing."
Social loafing alludes to the idea that individuals are inclined to apply less exertion on an assignment on the off chance that they are in a gathering versus when they work alone. Working in bunches is normally observed as an approach to enhance the achievement of an undertaking by pooling the aptitudes and abilities of the people in that gathering. </span>
Persianinty duh cmon bruh. (zoroastrianism)
i think you should teach her basic things like what and what not to do. maybe take her out for a day and intoduce her to her sorroundings
Slaves lots and lots of slaves