Answer:
Transportation used to go from one place to another. Traveling before the modernized vehchile of today was very slow and often people and their families stayed in a particular region due to inability to travel. Now we can travel from city to city, country to county, or even into space quickly and efficiently. Politically modern transportation has helped canidites reach people in demographics that formally were out of reach by hitting the small blue collar towns on their trips they have captured many votes that previously they wouldn't have had. Socially modern transportation has let us move through out our society and even experience other cultures yet still we are able to return home to family and friends often. Economically modern transportation has boosted the oil market mostly own by large corporations but with the majority of us depending on oil for fueling our cars and airplanes etc. we tend to look the other way when "big oil' takes shortcuts even if those shortcuts have caused ecosystems to fail completely.
Answer:
Joke be like the best part of brainly. What did the pope say to martin Luther?
Explanation:
Oh your being serious?
In that case...
Protestant author Philip Schaff notes that "The bull of excommunication is the papal counter-manifesto to Luther's Theses, and condemns in him the whole cause of the Protestant Reformation.
<span> Economic practices, social organization, laws, norms, language and the material culture of nomads have, usually, distinguished them greatly from their social surroundings.
They were the start to what we are today.</span>
Benefits:
In a hereditary monarchy, all the monarchs come from the same family, and the crown is passed down from one member of the family to another. ... When the king or queen of a hereditary monarchy dies or quits the throne (abdicates), the crown is generally passed to one of his or her children, often to the oldest.
Drawbacks:
Most obviously, the ruler is not chosen on merit but by the accident of birth. This may be described as letting God choose the ruler, but as Aelianus has remarked on these pages, He does this through secondary causes and has given us no guarantee that in this case secondary causes, undirected by human intelligence and will, will produce a particularly good result.