President Jefferson Davis commanded the Confederate Army during the Civil War.
<span>Everyone must share the means of production the ability to make what they need to live.</span>
The Supreme Court's decision in "Miranda v. Arizona" was based mainly on “the incorporation of due process rights in the Bill of Rights so as to make them apply to the states.”
The Miranda v. Arizona case in 1966 was a landmark case in the US justice since it considered that a prisoner has the right against self-incrimination when questioned by the police and the right of an attorney. This case is known as the “Miranda rights” since the US Supreme Court overturned Miranda’s conviction as his rights were not respected. The confession signed by Miranda when being interrogated by police was not admissible in court.
In this case, option B) is the correct one since the Miranda case is not associated with slavery, “amicus Curiae” or ex post facto laws.
Superpower tensions culminated in the Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962, as the Soviet Union sought to install medium-range nuclear missiles in Cuba, about 90 miles from the U.S. coast. Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro was reluctant to accept the missiles, and, once he was persuaded, warned Khrushchev against transporting the missiles in secret. Castro stated, thirty years later, "We had a sovereign right to accept the missiles. We were not violating international law. Why do it secretly—as if we had no right to do it.
On 16 October, Kennedy was informed that U-2 flights over Cuba had discovered what were most likely medium-range missile sites, and though he and his advisors considered approaching Khrushchev through diplomatic channels, could come up with no way of doing this that would not appear weak. On 22 October, Kennedy addressed his nation by television, revealing the missiles' presence and announcing a blockade of Cuba. Informed in advance of the speech but not the content, Khrushchev, and his advisors feared an invasion of Cuba. Even before Kennedy's speech, they ordered Soviet commanders in Cuba that they could use all weapons against an attack—except atomic weapons.
As the crisis unfolded, tensions were high in the U.S.; less so in the Soviet Union, where Khrushchev made several public appearances and went to the Bolshoi Theatre to hear American opera singer Jerome Hines, who was then performing in Moscow. By 25 October, with the Soviets unclear about Kennedy's full intentions, Khrushchev decided that the missiles would have to be withdrawn from Cuba. Two days later, he offered Kennedy terms for the withdrawal. Khrushchev agreed to withdraw the missiles in exchange for a U.S. promise not to invade Cuba and a secret promise that the U.S. would withdraw missiles from Turkey, near the Soviet heartland. As the last term was not publicly announced at the request of the U.S. and was not known until just before Khrushchev's death in 1971, the resolution was seen as a great defeat for the Soviets and contributed to Khrushchev's fall less than two years later.
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