William Magear "boss" Tweed is a corrupt representative who defrauds millions of dollars from New Yorkers. He and his peers in the Democratic Party in New York exploit their power in the government for personal gain. As a civil reformer and a cartoonist, Thomas Nast portrays William Tweed as a vulture who preys on New Yorkers.
Answer:
B
Explanation:
It allows the police to perform unwarned interrogations. (That is so intresting to me!)
It was in the area that we now know of as the Middle-east, and it was in between two rivers, the Tigris and the Euphrates.
Her thinking reflects: the Imaginary audience
The imaginary audience is a psychological occurrence where an individual imagines and believes that an imaginary group of people is currently watching what he/she is doing.
This is very common in young teenagers, the age when they started to grew and seek the approval of other people.
Answer:
a. The use of Greek mythical heroes for propaganda
Explanation:
The statue of Commodus is actually a statue of Hercules, the mythical greek demigod, and son of Zeus.
What the emperor Commodus intended with the statue, was to draw a comparison between himself and the figure of Hercules: what the Greek hero represents: strenghts and divinity.
For this reason, it can be said that the main function of the statue was to use Greek mythical figures for political propaganda.