Joseph Stalin was a brutal and sometime merciless leader who had powerful, unmoving visions for the USSR. Men were in high demand for industrial jobs during this time.
Clearly the establishment of the colonies comes first then next would be the Writs of Assistance, next the Intolerable Acts, Then finally the stamp act
Answer:
The Answer is D. "...a person or group of people who gain too much power can start making decisions that don't benefit all of society"
Explanation:
This answer pretty much explains exactly why separation of powers was necessary in order to ensure that no one branch can take absolute control of a country or have the most power.
Some might say FDR, some might say LBJ, others might say Nixon. The reality is that the power of the Legislative vis a vis the Executive is in constant flux.
In terms of sweeping policy initiatives FDR's administration might be the time when the Presidency took on many of its contemporary roles. The activism of the LBJ administration was a further expansion of the New Deal-era role of the FDR administration. LBJ also was arguably the first president to use the US armed forces in foreign engagements without Congress declaring war (Gulf of Tonkin resolution)--a precedent we have become all too familiar with. In terms of 'imperial pretensions' Nixon assumed all the New Deal, Great Society, civil rights activism, and the ability to intervene militarily of the preceding Presidencies and expanded them to include unfettered use of the CIA and FBI.