Answer:
Tartars
Explanation:
Europeans commonly refered to the Mongols as "Tartars", Tartarus is the root word for "hell" so the nickname literally means "people from Hell".
Answer:
There sure is.
Explanation:
As Eric Hobsbawm righteous explains in <em>The Age of Extremes </em>neither the Marxist historians nor the Revionist ones are right. To start with: when Truman left the white house in 1953 the cold war hadn´t started properly. And Stalin died in the same year. Nevertheless they did partly shape the hostile environment (Truman doctrine) of the two superpowers after the war.
Anyway, Hobsbawm quite convincingly argues that it was exaggerated American fear of Russian agression that lead ultimately to the cold war. The initially Russian ideal of spreading communism over the globe was not seen as realistic any more by the Sovjet leaders, even before the second world war. And after it the Sovjet union was weaker than ever before. And Stalin knew it. So yes, in a sense individual personalities (Americans) are to blaim. But not mentioning Kennedy in this list is ignoring the fact that the main actors, like Kennedy, ¨<em>tapped their way though a dense cloud of incomprehension, confusion and paranoia.¨</em>
Eric Hobsbawm
Answer:
Having more power than others
Explanation:
Moral inequality - Also referred to as political inequality, is based upon artificial foundations. It is formed not by Natural circumstances but by a convention or agreement among consenting men.
The societal differences in power, wealth, status or class are moral inequalities; they entail a single person benefiting at the detriment of another. Whilst a lot of authors have confused the term with the natural state of affairs, it should be noted that this type of inequality is a recent creation.
I think the correct answer from the choices listed above is option B. It was Joseph Smith who formed the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and faced discrimination as a result. Hope this answers the question. Have a nice day.
The declaration was a laundry list of affronts to the colonies by King George III, wherein Jefferson et.al. argued that since the monarchy did not treat the colonists like other Britons, the colonists had the right to form their own sovereign nation. It was also intended to justify this action to other monarchies to prevent them from helping Britain retain the colonies under the doctrine of Intervention. So it helped to justify the war domestically and internationally.