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kvasek [131]
3 years ago
14

If both houses (the House & senate) pass the bill, it then goes to the________

History
2 answers:
Leya [2.2K]3 years ago
7 0

If both houses pass the bill, it then goes to the President

Fudgin [204]3 years ago
6 0
I'm pretty sure the answer is it goes to the Senate
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What kind of lasting impact did the Irish Christian movement have on the Christian world?
Iteru [2.4K]

Answer:

The First Christians who arrived to Ireland was from British and France.

Explanation:

Before Christianity arrived people practiced pagan religion. Pagan people built monuments allover Ireland and they worshiped sun a lot. Christianity was brought by Saint Patrick who was kidnapped by the sea pirates and he reached the shore of Ireland and thereby succeeded in spreading the faith of Christianity. After which Christianity flourished and many monasteries were built.  

By the twelfth century English men involved in Irish invasions. New laws were introduced which oppressed the Irish Catholics. The English crown decided to shut down the sacred monasteries and places of worship were demolished by the British.

In late sixteenth century Oliver Plunkett was appointed to be the cardinal and he was ordered to accept Holy Communion in the Anglicized tradition, he refused and Oliver Plunkett was executed in London for disobeying the crown.

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3 years ago
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Why did the constitutional convention delegates agree on a bicameral legislature
mojhsa [17]
It was a compromise to appease both sides of the debate. They decided to have a bicameral legislature in order to encompass both systems. One that has equal representation regardless of the size of the state, and one system that has representation based on the number of the population. This way both sides would be happy, and that's why today there is the Senate and the House of Representatives, and both houses form the Congress which is the seat of federal power.
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4 years ago
How do the borders of Israel shift throughout time until more present day?
JulsSmile [24]

More than 70 years after Israel declared statehood, its borders are yet to be entirely settled. Wars, treaties and occupation mean the shape of the Jewish state has changed over time, and in parts is still undefined.

 

 

The land which would become Israel was for centuries part of the Turkish-ruled Ottoman Empire. After World War One and the collapse of the empire, territory known as Palestine - the portion of which west of the River Jordan was also known as the land of Israel by Jews - was marked out and assigned to Britain to administer by the victorious allied powers (soon after endorsed by the League of Nations). The terms of the mandate entrusted Britain with establishing in Palestine "a national home for the Jewish people", so long as doing so did not prejudice the civil and religious rights of non-Jewish communities there.

 

The rise of Palestinian Arab nationalism coupled with the rapid growth of Palestine's smaller Jewish population - especially after the advent of Nazism in the 1930s - saw an escalation in Arab-Jewish violence in Palestine. Britain handed the problem to the United Nations, which in 1947 proposed partitioning Palestine into two states - one Jewish, one Arab - with the Jerusalem-Bethlehem area to become an international city. The plan was accepted by Palestine's Jewish leadership but rejected by Arab leaders.

The Jewish leadership in Palestine declared the establishment of the State of Israel on 14 May 1948, the moment the British mandate terminated, though without announcing its borders. The following day Israel was invaded by five Arab armies, marking the start of Israel's War of Independence. The fighting ended in 1949 with a series of ceasefires, producing armistice lines along Israel's frontiers with neighbouring states, and creating the boundaries of what became known as the Gaza Strip (occupied by Egypt) and East Jerusalem and the West Bank (occupied by Jordan). The surrounding Arab states refused to recognise Israel, meaning its borders remained unset.

 

The biggest change to Israel's frontiers came in 1967, when the conflict known as the Six Day War left Israel in occupation of the Sinai peninsula, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, East Jerusalem and most of the Syrian Golan Heights - effectively tripling the size of territory under Israel's control. Israel effectively annexed East Jerusalem - claiming the whole of the city as its capital - and the Golan Heights. These moves were not recognised by the international community, until the US changed its official position on the matter under the Trump administration, becoming the first major power to do so. Overwhelmingly, international opinion continues to consider East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights as occupied territory.

 

One of Israel's land borders was formalised for the first time in 1979, when Egypt became the first Arab country to recognise the Jewish state. Under the treaty, Israel's border with Egypt was set and Israel withdrew all its forces and settlers from the Sinai, a process which was completed in 1982. That left Israel in occupation of the Gaza Strip, East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights, with its frontiers (excluding that of Egypt) still delineated by the 1949 armistice lines.

In 1994, Jordan became the second Arab state to recognise Israel, formalising its long border with the Jewish state in the process. While there has not yet been a peace treaty between Israel and Lebanon, the two countries' 1949 armistice line serves as Israel's de facto northern border, while Israel's border with Syria remains unsettled.

Similarly, Israel has had a de facto border with Gaza since it pulled its troops and settlers out in 2005, but Gaza and the West Bank are considered a single occupied entity by the UN, and the official borders have not yet been determined. The final status and contours of the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem are meant to be decided in negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians living there under Israeli occupation, but decades of on-off talks have so far proved fruitless.

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3 years ago
During the Middle Ages the practice of witchcraft was widely regarded as what?
belka [17]

Answer:

D None of the

Explanation:

Witches were considered Satan's followers, members of an antichurch and an antistate, the sworn enemies of Christian society in the Middle Ages.

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A______ Committee is one of 16 permanent Senate committees
erastovalidia [21]
Is there answers to it ? If so it’s standing committee
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