He shot himself in the head
Answer:
Serious
Explanation:
It says we die soon. Death is a serious matter.
There are countries nowadays, that live exactly like 1000 years ago. Maybe it would be easier to turn the question that way.
Ancient tribes still exist. They have gratitude for the simplest things, have kept secular traditions, and don't necessarily check their mobile phones for notifications about 27859 times a day.
The disadvantage is that they don't get the news about the latest iPhone in time. They don't even have money to buy a cigarette. They make them. But still.
People are totally uniform (you are likely to find the same brands whether you go to Doha, New York or London), everything is global, as are becoming languages (how many languages = ways of seeing the universe have totally vanished during the last 100 years ?) nowadays.
While 1000 years ago, diversity, total lack of pollution (either electromagnetic, chemical, radiological, sound, or material), lack of deforestation and animal species slaughter, certainly made life much tougher for human beings, but certainly not for the global Ecosystem seen as a whole.
Answer: C, woodland period
Explanation: Native American groups from the Ohio Valley spread certain rituals down to Georgia during the Woodland period.
Explanation:
The Electoral College is an election topic that inspires confusion, controversy and conflict. Many people know that the Electoral College is part of the Presidential election process but may be unsure about its importance and how it works.
In the early days of our country’s formation, deciding on the process for electing a U.S. President was a controversial topic. Some suggested that Congress should choose the President. Others argued that it should be a democratic vote by the people. The compromise was the Electoral College, which has been in effect ever since.
How the Electoral College works
The Electoral College is composed of electors who each cast one electoral vote following the voting that takes place in the general election. Each state gets a certain number of electors based on its total number of representatives in Congress, which reflects population numbers for that state. There is a total of 538 electoral votes and the candidate must win the majority of the electoral votes to win the election. Therefore, the candidate who gets more than half (270 electoral votes) wins the Presidential election.
Based on the Electoral College, Presidential campaigns prioritize victories in states that will total more than 270 electoral votes, rather than trying to win the most actual direct votes nationwide. The key reason for this strategy is that in every state, except Nebraska and Maine, the candidate who wins the most votes in a state also wins all the electors from that state, regardless of the margin of victory. This winner-take-all electoral system makes it possible for one candidate to get more votes nationwide, but a different candidate to win in the Electoral College and ultimately, win the Presidency.