Answer:
3.) Northwest Ordinance of 1787
Explanation:
sorry if not right
Answer:
were related to the Native American belief that sacred spirits could be found in living and inanimate things.
Explanation:
The mythologies of the natives of North America comprise many sets of traditional stories associated with religion from a mythological perspective. The indigenous belief systems of America include many sacred stories. Such spiritual stories are rooted in a connection with nature and have many symbols linked to the cycles of seasons, the biodiversity, and natural elements. Also, the idea of mother-earth, a connection with the Earth or the principle of the Great Spirit that encompasses everything, a form of universal and omniscient pantheism, are common. There are also several stories about creation, the link with animal spirits, animism, and the collective memory of common ancestors. Traditional worship practices are often part of tribal gatherings, which include dance, use of hallucinogenic plants, rhythm, songs and trance. For these reasons, Native American religious ceremonies were related to the idea that sacred spirits could be found in living and inanimate things, such as animals, plants, rocks, or rivers.
Answer:
Third-party candidates at the top of the ticket can help to draw attention to other party candidates down the ballot, helping them to win local or state office.
Explanation:
Correct answer: Creating the Environmental Protection Agency
Explanation/detail:
The formal recognition of China and Strategic Arms Limitations Talks (SALT) were <u>foreign</u> policy initiatives (not domestic).
As to interest rates, during the Nixon presidency, the Federal Reserve chairman, Arthur Burns, had begun raising interest rates. In 1971, President Nixon exerted pressure on Burns and "the Fed" to keep interest rates down, but that only led to a decade of high inflation that caused other economic problems. So that was not a success for Nixon.
<u>About the Environmental Protection Agency</u>
President Nixon signed an executive order establishing the Environmental Protection Agency in 1970. Subsequent committee hearings in the House of Representatives and the Senate ratified Nixon's order for the creation of the agency.
Environmental issues had been gaining much attention during the 1960s, and the need for oversight became clear. As Lily Rothman reported in a TIME magazine article:
- <em>An oil spill off the California coast in 1969 coated 400 square miles with slime and killed hundreds of birds. Scientists announced that auto exhaust was at high enough levels in some places that it could cause birth defects. The city of St. Louis smelled, as one resident put it, “like an old-fashioned drugstore on fire.”</em>
<em>- </em>"Here's Why the Environmental Protection Agency Was Created," <em>TIME, </em>March 22, 2017
Nixon's administration felt it necessary to take action to address pollution problems in the American environment.