<span>"Voyageur", the French word for traveler, refers to the contracted employees who worked as canoe paddlers, bundle carriers, and general laborers for fur trading firms from the 1690s until the 1850s. This is why voyageurs were also known as "engagés", a loose French expression translated as "employees". The voyageurs, who were under the direction of a clerk (commis), were distinguished from "freemen", in other words, people who trapped and traded furs on their own account without being bound by a contract. Though it is true that the majority of voyageurs were French-Canadian, there were those who were English, German, and Iroquois</span>
ANSWER: C.
Among the options, choice C would best describe the effect if the citizens who are voting are informed. One major problem about politics right now is the politicians' ability to trick people into voting for them either through cheap attractive tricks or pretentious care for certain issues.
If everyone who is voting knows what the officials are talking about, they will easily be held accountable.
One of the clearest policy manifestations of the "kill the Indian, save the man" concept in western expansion would be those of the boarding school era. These policies removed Native American children from their homes and sent them to far-off boarding schools in an effort to replace (and remove) Native languages, customs, and culture from an entire generation. White policymakers waged a cultural genocide on the generation in an effort to replace their Native traditions with English, Christianity, and other white, Euroamerican values. The earliest boarding schools were actually created by William Pratt, the military official who first coined the "kill the Indian, save the man" motto.
Answer:
overexploitation since Cyrenaica became a Roman senatorial province, and the abandonment of the previous strict control over its collection.
Explanation: