No. Some candidates make promises just to make themselves sound more appealing, nothing is set in stone unless they sign a paper with their signatures before hand (I'm not sure they're technically allowed in many cases.) Like for example one of the presidents (I won't name any names so that we won't get into a political debate) had promised and swore that they'd do something but once they'd won presidency, they'd completely deleted it from their page and acted as though it hadn't happened, stating that they'd just changed their mind!
Good luck, rockstar! I hope you pass. (;
<span>Mayan rulers and
nobles were considered half gods, half humans, and also chosen by the
gods themselves to govern, while much of their work was to please and
appease the gods, being like a bridge between the gods Mayas and men. This
made the Maya think that their rulers actually had contact with the
gods and could talk to them, giving a relationship where the Maya and
their gods could ensure their understanding and good relationship. In
other Mesoamerican groups, it was thought that the deities were very
superior and there was no way to contact them, except through sacrifices
and prayers of the monarchs and priests; <span>but the Mayans thought that their monarchs, working for the gods, were in harmony and in order with the deity.</span></span>
The Mongols invaded and introduced Islamic law.was not a result of the collapse of the Western Roman Empire and that is the proper answer for that question <span>
</span>
Oklahoma was still mired in economic depression on September 1, 1939, when Germany invaded Poland, igniting World War II. Six years of Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal had provided assistance to Oklahomans but had not produced prosperity. The next six years of worldwide conflict freed the Sooner State from the grip of the Great Depression and produced change on a scale seldom equaled in American history.
Oklahoma's fiscally conservative governor, Leon C. "Red" Phillips (1939–43), who had opposed many New Deal measures, could expect few favors from President Roosevelt. Nevertheless, Oklahoma community leaders and chambers of commerce successfully lobbied federal officials for a share of defense spending. Even before the United States entered the war, federal dollars poured into the state for training pilots, establishing military installations, and constructing wartime production facilities. The Selective Service Act of 1940 reduced unemployment and eventually placed so many men in uniform that women entered the work force in unprecedented numbers.