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MariettaO [177]
3 years ago
15

Can someone answer this please

History
1 answer:
borishaifa [10]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

Contraband

Explanation:

this is the correct answerhope this helps

plz make me brainliest plzzz

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Which best explains the rise to power of Great Zimbabwe?
kap26 [50]
The choices can be found elsewhere and as follows:

A). Zimbabwe was a highly productive agricultural society. 
B).Fish from Zimbabwe were a staple food of East African people. 
C).Zimbabwe's military was stronger than others in the region. 
<span>D).Zimbabwe controlled the region's ivory and gold trade. 
</span>
I believe the correct answer is the second option. A eason for great zimbabwe's rise to power would be that fish from Zimbabwe were a staple food of East African people. 
6 0
3 years ago
Name at least three allies of the United States today. How do you think the United States would support these allies in times of
TiliK225 [7]
Germany- The U.S. might be less willing to support Germany in a time of war after WW1, but would help them immensly during a time of peace.
Japan- The U.S. might be less willing to support Japan during a time of war, but would help Japan during a time of peace.
Mexico- The U.S. might not help Mexico during a time of war (because of Trump), but would probaly help Mexico during peace.
Hope This Helps!
8 0
3 years ago
Why was Timbuktu an important location in Mali's empire?
Zigmanuir [339]
<span>Timbuktu was important because most of the trading centers were located in the region.</span>
7 0
3 years ago
How were opponents of Hiram Rhodes Revels trying to use the Fourteenth Amendment to
9966 [12]

Answer:

United States Senate in 187o and argue that Dred Scott had ever been

authoritative. "I never expected to hear read in the Senate of the

United States, or in any court of justice where authority was looked

for, the Dred Scott decision," said Senator James Nye of Nevada.40

Senator Jacob Howard of Michigan was less civil. He pronounced himself "nauseated," disdaining entirely the thought of going "into that

recondite inquiry as to the political status of a black man under the

Dred Scott decision."41 Not to be outdone, Senator Charles Sumner of

Massachusetts declared that Dred Scott had been "[b]orn a putrid

corpse," and described it as "a stench in the nostrils ... to be remembered only as a warning and a shame. '42

In a mirror image of the Democratic belief that the Fourteenth

Amendment had not validly overruled Dred Scott, many Republicans believed that Dred Scott had no legal force even without the Fourteenth Amendment. One can distinguish two forms of that belief. The

first, which might follow from Senator Sumner's description of Dred

Scott as "born a putrid corpse," is that Dred Scott was so wrong as to

have been invalid ab initio. The other, which is more complex conceptually but yields the same result, is that events following Dred Scott - the election of President Lincoln, Southern secession, the Civil War,

emancipation, and perhaps the postwar constitutional amendments - amounted to a radical break with the past, one that made it senseless

to treat certain legal authorities from the old regime as if they had continuing meaning. On this view, the Republican position might not be

that Revels had been a citizen for nine chronological years before 1870,

or at least not in a sense that could be confirmed by asking whether a

court in i86i would have deemed him a citizen. Instead, the position would be that in 1870, it was impermissible to betray fundamental

principles of the new order by giving legal effect to the fact that other

principles - evil principles - had been applied at an earlier time.

Whatever people might have done in 1857 or i86i, this perspective

would hold, it would violate the norms of 187o to give continuing force

to Dred Scott.

Although not always clearly distinguishing between those two positions, several Republicans argued that the Civil War itself demonstrated Dred Scott's invalidity. "The comment made upon that great wrongful judicial decision is to be seen in the dreadful war through

which we have passed," said Senator Howard.43 Senator Frederick

Sawyer, a transplanted Bostonian representing South Carolina, spoke of the war as "the great court of errors" that had reversed the Taney

Explanation:

5 0
3 years ago
Can someone help me with this question
DanielleElmas [232]

Answer:

What challenges did the new nation face in the immediate aftermath of the revolutionary War? challenge of building a sound economy, preserving national independence, and creating a stable political system which provided a legitimate place for opposition. The new nation also faced economic and foreign policy problems.

Explanation: hope this helps!

3 0
3 years ago
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