<u>Answer:</u>
The excerpts point of view towards Alaska is best described in the "Alaska is land that no one wants".
<u>Explanation:</u>
- It can be understood from the choice of words by the writer, cash and cast off that Alaska is not worth much.
- It further emphasizes in the article that any bankrupt monarch (emphasis on impoverished) can purchase it from the USA for their retirement.
- Alaska is the northernmost and westernmost state in the United States.
Today, the national debt that Hamilton began with a bank loan of $19,608.81 is the largest single entry on any set of books in the world. The federal government pays $19,608.81 in interest on its current debt every 2.4 seconds.
What would Hamilton think of his creation today? He would surely be impressed with its sheer size, although he would note that relative to the American GDP, about $14 trillion, it is "not excessive." But he would, I suspect, not be happy with what borrowed money is being used for. Hamilton saw the debt as a powerful means of fighting wars, building infrastructure, and getting through economic bad times. For the last 30 years and more, however, the national debt has been increasingly used so that no one in Washington ever has to say no to anyone.
Explanation:
in 1962, the Cuban Missile Crisis brought the world to the brink of nuclear war, when the United States discovered that the Soviet Union was attempting to assemble nuclear missiles in Cuba. In 1965, the United States intervened in the Dominican Republic to prevent what it thought was a communist uprising.