The correct answer is C) detract from the public good.
In Federalist, no. 10, Madison insists that factions should be avoided because they detract from the public good.
In the times when Federalists and Antifederalists were trying to convince the American people of the advantages of ratifying the United States Constitutions, Federalists James Madison -a prominent American and founding father- wrote the Federalist Paper N.- 10 in 1787.
One of his arguments was his concerns about the creation of factions in the country because that would mean particular agendas or interests over the interests of citizens of the United States. So we could say he was concerned by the possibility of powerful interests could infiltrate and capture the government and expand their self-interests at the expense of the citizens.
The Battle of Gettysburg<span>, fought in July 1863, was a Union victory that stopped Confederate General Robert E. Lee's second invasion of the North. More than 50,000 men fell as casualties during the 3-day </span>battle<span>, making it the bloodiest </span>battle<span> of the American Civil </span><span>War</span>
Answer:
West Africans exported cotton cloth, gold, metal ornaments, and leather items north throughout the trans-Saharan exchange routes, in exchange for horses, copper, textiles, salt, and beads. Later, ivory, slaves, and kola nuts had been also traded.
Explanation:
not needed :)
Japanese Americans after the Pearl Harbor attack were removed from their homes against their will and placed in internment camps after Executive Order 9066 was instituted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, despite heavy resistance from the political system. It was done in the name of national security, since it was assumed that there might be sleeper agents for the Japanese in the U.S.
This was very similar to what was done to German-Americans in both WWI and WWII. After the repeated German submarine attacks, German Americans were labeled "enemy aliens" and place in internment camps. The executive order from FDR also applied to Germans, as well as Italians.
However, the Japanese were treated differently because Japanese people who were American citizens were also apprehended, despite the order originally applying to only enemy aliens, or non-citizens.