D is your answer. Nixon was involved in covering up the break in
He proclaimed to us his covenant, which he commanded us to keep:
the Ten Commandments, which he wrote on two tablets of stone."
Deuteronomy 20:17 and Exedus
Answer: Are those choices or what you have to answer
Explanation:
The complexity of Africans' political relationships among themselves, then, influenced the nature of their resistance to colonial rule. As they resisted European invasions, they confronted both European and African soldiers. That is, they confronted a political hierarchy imposed by Western Europeans that included African proxies. The power was European, but the face of it on the local level was often African. Despite these seeming contradictions, it remains insufficient to speak of African responses to the imposition of colonial rule as a choice between either collaboration or resistance. It was possible to resist colonial rule through collaboration with the colonizers in one instance and in the next to resist European authority. It was also possible to limit European political control through some form of collaboration with European generals or colonial administrators. This is all to suggest that Africans evaluated their circumstances, assessed possible actions and consequences, to make rational responses. Some form of resistance, moreover, remained constant during the period of formal European political dominance. Ethiopia stands alone, however, as the one African society to successfully defend itself against an invading European army and remain free of direct European political domination
Benjamin Franklin created the Junto, also known as the
Leather Apron Club, in 1727 in Philadelphia. Its purpose was to debate
questions of morals, politics, and natural philosophy. It also aimed to
exchange knowledge of business affairs. Apart from this, the Junto was also a
charitable organization that made a subscription public library of the members’
own books. The group was made of Benjamin Franklin’s close friends. It
originally had 12 members who had various occupations and backgrounds but
sharing the same spirit and desire for mutual improvement.