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devlian [24]
3 years ago
5

Help me as soon as possible there is points involved

History
1 answer:
skelet666 [1.2K]3 years ago
3 0
He changed the name to constinople
You might be interested in
Hey help please I'm on a test I have 1 hour left!
Veseljchak [2.6K]

Answer:

people began to loose faith, option B

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
How did the red guards affect the chinese population?
tangare [24]

Red Guards<span>, </span>Chinese (Pinyin) <span>Hongweibing </span>or (Wade-Giles romanization) Hung-wei-ping, in Chinese history, groups of militant university and high school students formed into paramilitary units as part of the Cultural Revolution (1966–76). These young people often wore green jackets similar to the uniforms of the Chinese army at the time, with red armbands attached to one of the sleeves. They were formed under the auspices of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 1966 in order to help party chairman Mao Zedong combat “revisionist” authorities—i.e., those party leaders Mao considered as being insufficiently revolutionary. Mao was thus making a bid to regain control of the CCP from his colleagues, but the Red Guards who responded in August 1966 to his summons fancied themselves as new revolutionary rebels pledged to eliminating all remnants of the old culture in China, as well as purging all supposedly bourgeois elements within the government. Several million Red Guards journeyed to Beijing to meet with Mao in eight massive demonstrations late in 1966, and the total number of Red Guards throughout the country may have reached 11 million at some point.

While engaging in marches, meetings, and frenzied propagandizing, Red Guard units attacked and persecuted local party leaders as well as schoolteachers and school officials, other intellectuals, and persons of traditional views. Several hundred thousand people died in the course of these persecutions. By early 1967 Red Guard units were overthrowing existing party authorities in towns, cities, and entire provinces. These units soon began fighting among themselves, however, as various factions vied for power amidst each one’s claims that it was the true representative of Maoist thought. The Red Guards’ increasing factionalism and their total disruption of industrial production and of Chinese urban life caused the government in 1967–68 to urge the Red Guards to retire into the countryside. The Chinese military was called in to restore order throughout the country, and from this point the Red Guard movement gradually subsided.

7 0
3 years ago
Explain why the Articles of Confederation proved too weak to meet the needs of the 13 new states. Describe at least two examples
Elodia [21]

The Articles of Confederation were far too weak to meet the needs of the newly created United States because of the massive decentralization the Articles contained.

They did not give the government any right to tax the people, and had to ask the states for taxes, and the states were not keen to pay them unless it benefited them. Often found were states not contributing to the pay of the Continental Army because it was not in their territory and defending them. This was also the reason Valley Forge was a disastrous winter for the Continental Army.

The Constitution fixed this by mandating budgets and making sure the states did in fact pay dues to the Gov't, later amended with (the supposed temporary) Federal income tax, starting after The Great War.

The other big failure is the lack of a requirement delegates be there, and the fact it requires every state to vote yes, an amendment to let the Confederation place import taxes to help pay the army was a washed failure because Rhode Island feared having their economy impacted horribly as they were so small they only had trade.

The New Constitution fixed this by making it so 3/4 of the states had to vote Aye to an amendment to the Constitution itself, and made the Federal Government itself handle passes legislation at it's own level with a majority rules, rather than all.

A four episode series from Extra History delve with a good amount of detail as to the Articles' other short comings, and what I elaborated on. Would strongly recommend a watch: https://youtu.be/C6rHSiN0vKk

3 0
3 years ago
What gains didIf we can Americans make in late 1940s
densk [106]
Subsequent to World War II, the development of nuclear weaponry, like those used at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, soared in anticipation of the Cold War. Furthermore, because resource and consumer production were converted to suit the needs of a wartime economy, citizens protected and increased savings for the time when the manufacture of cars boomed instead of military tanks. Following the war, the United States of America experienced a dramatic increase in the quality of the economy. It was continuously stimulated through the purchase of items that were available in the late '30s, for example. 

The technology of society was also propelled further than ever before; the idea of colored television toyed with the minds of viewers and advertisements became incredibly popular and effective in marketing. New inventions crowded shelves as shoppers became increasingly aware of the benefits that 'Hoovers,' or vacuums, provided in the home, for instance. 


7 0
3 years ago
How do the media affect government? Elected officials count on the media for financial support. Elected officials use the media
son4ous [18]
The first one is not true directly. However they use the media for fundraiser announcements and pleas for more money. This is probably the second best answer.

I think B is the answer. The media is intended to communicate information. What elected officials are doing is information <<<<

Unfortunately C is also correct. The media is used to spread messages (sometimes labeled propaganda.) Which to pick?

And so is D. Gallop polls certainly are of great interest to the media, also as much as they are of interest to the elected officials. 


8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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