This must refer to the French and Indian War where it
affected not only countries who fought it but also Native Americans and
settlers many of whom lost their lives during the conflict. This would later lead to discontent with
British rule that imposed too many acts on the colonists. The result was the Revolutionary War.
I'am thinking the first part is Africa but I'm not a hundred percent sure but that's what I'm thinking
Two important ways that the authors of the constitution limited the powers of the president is with separation of powers and checks and balances and a bicameral legislature. I believe that they did do a good job of balancing that power from what I've seen today, although there are loopholes. For example, the president is the commander-in-chief of the army, however only Congress can declare war. But the loophole to this is that the president can actually still wage a war as long as he doesn't "declare" it a war, he can still send troops abroad.
The first Chinese entered California in 1848, and within a few years, thousands more came, lured by the promise of Gam Sann or “Gold Mountain”. Soon, discriminatory legislation forced them out of the gold fields and into low-paying, menial jobs. They laid tracks for the Central Pacific Railroad, reclaimed swamp land in the Sacramento delta, developed shrimp and abalone fisheries, and provided cheap labor wherever there was work no other group wanted or needed.
During the 1870s, an economic downturn resulted in serious unemployment problems and led to politically motivated outcries against immigrants who would work for low wages. In reaction to states starting to pass immigration laws, the federal government asserted its authority to control immigration and passed the first immigration law in 1882. The Exclusion Acts, a series of restrictive laws prohibiting immigration, specifically targeted Chinese immigrants. Subsequent immigration laws were eventually consolidated under the Immigration Act of 1924, effecting certain nationalities and social classes of Asian immigrants.
Surrounded by public controversy from its inception, the station was finally put into operation in 1910. Immigrants arrived from approximately 84 different countries, with Chinese immigrants constituting the single largest ethnic group entering at San Francisco until 1915, when Japanese outnumbered the Chinese for the first time. Widely known as the “Ellis Island of the West” the station differed from Ellis Island in one important respect – the majority of immigrants processed on Angel Island were from Asian countries, specifically China, Japan, Russia and South Asia (in that order). Dubbed as the “Guardian of the Western Gate,” by its staff, this facility was built to help keep Chinese and eventually other Asian immigrants out of the country
1. <span>economic system based on private ownership and competition motivated by profit</span>