Answer: one good way they could avoided it's downfall was a better ruler
Answer:
Check explanation
Explanation:
The Law of Suspects was a French decree passed on the 17th of September, 1793 during the French Revolution. The law ordered the arrest of all suspected enemies of the Revolution. The decree lasted until 28th of July, 1794 after the fall of architect of the Terror,in person of Maximilien Robespierre. The law was officially abolished in October, 1795.
Examples of people who would have been considered suspects are;
(1). Those who have done nothing against freedom.
(2). Those who have done nothing for freedom.
Donald Greer, Jean Tulard and Louis Jacob.
The Committee of Public Safety would have considered them suspects because they thought they don't have the right to do so and that the suspect can stage revolution.
Answer:
drafting in Vietnam War
Explanation:
During Vietnam War, Government started drafting boys who were 18 or + and that influnced 26th amendment because boys who were 18 protested that they should get a chance to vote for their Commander-in-chief (the President) as they are going to work under him/her.
The main impact that affected how state institutions should work after the <em>Emancipation Proclamation</em> is associated with a series of constitutional amendments promoted by the Congress ending slavery, granting citizenship, and giving black men voting rights, changing the political environment, to the point that for example, by 1872, 1,510 African Americans held office in the southern states.
By the other hand, the impact on northern culture is wide, throughout the spreading of Frederick Douglass, Wendell Phillips, and Lucy Stone ideas. Other authors like James Russell Lowell, influenced popular literature with poetry. In education, the first nation’s experiment in racially integrated coeducation with the founding of Oberlin College and Illinois’s Knox College, a western center of abolitionism are some of the most important pieces of evidence of abolitionism on American culture.