Answer:
The act of draft card burning was defended as a symbolic form of free speech, a constitutional right guaranteed by the First Amendment.
Explanation:
The Supreme Court decided against the draft card burners; it determined that the federal law was justified and that it was unrelated to the freedom of speech.
In the Revolutionary War, people in America who supported the British were called Loyalists. They were loyal to the crown.
Shakespeare wrote a burlesques which a comical exaggerated imitation of something or some in a dramatic or literal work.
Answer: TRUE.
In November 1862 Burnside was ordered to take charge of the Army of the Potomac after McClellan was relieved from duty. He reluctantly accepted "the offer" and immediately ordered a bold advance toward the Confederate capital of Richmond. Burnside met with heavy delays in crossing the Rappahannock River, which allowed General Lee to assemble his Army of Northern Virginia outside the town of Fredericksburg. In the ensuing
battle, Burnside’s forces made a series of failed frontal assaults against Lee’s nearly impregnable defenses, resulting in a decisive Confederate victory and almost 13,000 Union casualties. Burnside attempted to rally his demoralized army for a second offensive, but the plan, later known as the Mud March was thwarted by heavy rains and failed to materialize.
Answer:
The United States wanted to previously intervene in Japan’s conquest of Dutch East Indies and Singapore. However a surprise attack on December 7, 1941 by Japanese on US naval base located at Pearl Harbour which claimed many lives changed the dynamics.
President Roosevelt of the United States signed the beginning of war against the Japanese. He labeled the diplomatic negotiations for possible peace in Asia.
as deceptive.
Diplomatic solutions would have been possible if the attack didn’t take place before the signing of the agreement.