Money goes in a bank
...had not been able to agree on whether to allow slavery in New Mexico Territories and New Mexico...
Hope this helps :)
Japan.
They've got a booming tech field and car industry after World War II. Of course, their anime industry is highly valued too.
And life there, from what I've heard, is pretty darn good.
Answer:
Social reform.
Explanation:
The illustration titled 'The Crusaders' was drawn by Carl Hassmann. <u>The illustration depicts a substantial group of politicians and journalists crusading against corruption and bribery (graft)</u>. The weapons they have in their hands are pen like shaped. The politicians and the journalists are charging in the crusades as a knights.
The resaon that these politicians and journalists are charging as a knights is for social reforming. The illustration depicts that they are charging against the <em>'graft and corruption' </em>resembling their fight for social reformation.
Therefore, the correct answer is option A.
Because woman teach but teach in their homes
After three centuries of colonial rule, independence came rather suddenly to most of Spanish and Portuguese America. Between 1808 and 1826 all of Latin America except the Spanish colonies of Cuba and Puerto Rico slipped out of the hands of the Iberian powers who had ruled the region since the conquest. The rapidity and timing of that dramatic change were the result of a combination of long-building tensions in colonial rule and a series of external events.
The reforms imposed by the Spanish Bourbons in the 18th century provoked great instability in the relations between the rulers and their colonial subjects in the Americas. Many Creoles (those of Spanish parentage but who were born in America) felt Bourbon policy to be an unfair attack on their wealth, political power, and social status. Others did not suffer during the second half of the 18th century; indeed, the gradual loosening of trade restrictions actually benefited some Creoles in Venezuela and certain areas that had moved from the periphery to the centre during the late colonial era. However, those profits merely whetted those Creoles’ appetites for greater free trade than the Bourbons were willing to grant. More generally, Creoles reacted angrily against the crown’s preference for peninsulars in administrative positions and its declining support of the caste system and the Creoles’ privileged status within it. After hundreds of years of proven service to Spain, the American-born elites felt that the Bourbons were now treating them like a recently conquered nation....