Keeping it brief, the Court -- little by little -- gradually asserted that certain rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights are, in some way, "in" the 14th too; that the 14th protects those rights from being violated by the states. But the Court never said that all of the rights in the Bill of Rights are "in" the 14th. Over the course of many decades the Court kept on expanding the list of which rights in the BoR are "in" the 14th, but all along the way the Court kept on saying too, that not all of the rights are "in." By the 1960's *most* of the rights in the BoR were "absorbed" into the 14th.
Answer:They exposed government corruption in the hope of changing unfair laws.
Explanation:
Robert E. Lee was in charge of the Confederate Army. Abraham Lincoln was the President of the United States and Jefferson Davis was the President of the Confederate states. Ulysses S grant was commander of the Union Army, so none of those answers are correct.
Answer: nationalize the film industry
Explanation:
The Bolsheviks were founded by Alexander Bogdanov and Vladimir Lenin and they took over power in Russia in 1917. They understood the power the film industry possesses as they started that the cinema was the. most important of all arts.
In 1919, the film industry was nationalized by the Bolsheviks nationalized whereby the control on film production was given to the People's Commissariat for Education, telling them use the cinema as a way of promoting Communist cause at home.
Answer: C
It made sense to join other nations who trading and investing there.
Explanation:
The United States wanted to get involved in trade with China because it made sense to join other nations who were trading and investing there. Previously in the 1600s, the American colonies were part of England where they were only able to acquire Chinese products through the British East India Company which had monopolized the trade. It's estimated that 1 billion cups of tea were consumed annually before the American revolution and by the end of the revolution, America wanted to trade directly with China to secure profits as those made by the British. This in return would employ people who depended on the sea and further generate capital for development which had been stimulated by the development of this foreign trade. The Americans wanted to trade with the Chinese as they had been trading with other countries from Africa, India, and Japan.