<span>1.) Why is the study of genocide important, and how can it be intellectually enlightening?
2.) </span><span>How could such powerful nations stand by as these slaughters were being committed?</span>
Answer:
what as the water gate scandel
Correct answer choice is :
<h2>A) By forming corporate boards
</h2><h2 /><h3>Explanation:</h3><h3 /><h3 />
The beginning of the railroads as a theory takes us back to 17th century England when rails were first laid down to overcome friction in moving heavily loaded trucks which would otherwise cut deep ruts. They named them gravity roads and they made their American appearance in 1764 for military goals at the Niagara portage in Lewistown New York, built by Captain John Montresor, a British engineer, and mapmaker.
Answer:
In 1783 Hamilton began to practice law in New York City. He defended unpopular loyalists who had remained faithful to the British during the Revolution in suits brought against them under a state law called the Trespass Act.
Explanation:
For Native Americans at the time, it would have been next to impossible to understand something like the Treaty of Tordesillas. This treaty intended to partition tracts of land that the Europeans did not even know whether they existed, an action that may have looked like sheer madness and even dishonorable, for the Europeans claimed possession of lands they had not conquered by the force of their arms.Maybe, after some thought and analysis, Native Americans would have felt outraged as a man living in such a distant place, the Pope in Rome, who had no authority whatsoever for them, made the decision of handing over lands, people,wealth, etc, to two different groups of Europeans. Perhaps, other Native Americans, once they managed to understand that agreement so odd to them, might have found it laughable and it might have prompted them to challenge to take what was their own over their dead bodies.