Answer:
The Continental Congress proclaimed the hero at Saratoga was Horatio Gates.
Explanation:
Horatio Gates was a former British soldier who served as a general in the United States during the American Revolutionary War. He is held responsible for the American victory in Saratoga but he was also blamed for the defeat at the Battle of Camden. Historian George Bilias describes Gates as one of the "most controversial military commanders of the American Revolution" because of his role in the Conway Cabal, a plot that attempted to discredit and remove General George Washington from command of the Continental Continental Army through a rumored campaign. There are also controversies about whether or not he was directly responsible for the victory at Saratoga and about the actions taken by Gates after the disastrous defeat at Camden.
Answer:
No.
Explanation:
Unless the juror could refer to evidence which proved the boy had committed the crime, then that view is invalid. Such labelling, present in the film, showed the dangers in pre-judging an individual. The film was taking a liberal view of society and justice personified by Henry Fonda against the widespread conservative prejudices of his fellow jurors.
Answer:
Because people were forcefully taken away from their home countries to another country entirely for slavery.
Explanation:
Chattel slavery is a forced diaspora "because people were forcefully taken away from their home countries to another country entirely for slavery." This was common during the trans-Atlantic trade which involves mass transportation of enslaved people from West Africa and Africa in general to America around the sixteenth century to the nineteenth century.
In other words, through chattel slavery, enslaved people were taken to another land without their consent. Thereby constituting "Forced Diaspora."
Thomas Jefferson is the one most responsible for writing the Declaration of Independence.
- The king refused to assent to laws that were wholesome and necessary for the public good.
- The king had forbidden colonial governors to enact laws or implement laws without his assent (which, as the prior point noted, he was in no hurry to give).
- The king forced people to give up their rights to legislative assembly or forced legislative bodies to meet in difficult places that imposed hardships on them.
- The king dissolved legislative assemblies and then refused for a long time to have other assemblies elected.
- The king obstructed justice in the colonies and made judges dependent on his will alone for their salaries and their tenure in office.
- The king kept standing armies in place in the colonies in peacetime, without the consent of the colonial legislatures.
- The king imposed taxes without the colonists' consent.
There were more items listed by Jefferson, but you get the idea. He was justifying revolution by proving tyranny was standard operating procedure by the British monarchy.