Yes, 6 million people became victims and die in the Holocaust
Paul McCartney
The album originally was released only in the Soviet Union in 1988 under the Russian title, "<span>Снова в СССР" ("Back in the USSR"). The album was later released internationally, in 1991. The album included McCartney's versions of rock-and-roll classics like, "Ain't that a Shame," "That's All Right, Mama," and "Lucille."</span>
(This isn’t going to be an actual paragraph answer - don’t put this as your answer, this is just some guidance) I don’t know if you’re familiar with Machiavelli’s “The Prince” but in the text Machiavelli says that all a man really care about is his property (or something like that, I’d fact check it/get an actual quote). Locke very much so supported a absolute monarch and “The Prince” is essentially a guide of sorts for absolute rulers -> Locke was a fan of Machiavelli’s work. Thomas Jefferson on the other hand did not support an absolute ruler (he was of English decent, like other American colonists, and England was a constitutional monarchy, hince the American constitution/government) and therefore probably didn’t support Machiavelli’s work but he was a fan of Locke (a lot of the founding fathers were fans of enlightenment thinkers, John Locke was an elightened thinker) so Jefferson took his ideas from Locke.
<span>It was a music festival that epitomized the ideals of the counterculture.</span>