The answer to this question is Yes.
Answer:
Early European colonies in the New World succeeded only if local Indians allowed them to and if they were lucky. When European settlers arrived in the New World, they often placed their colonies among people who had established complex webs of political relationships that included both alliances and rivalries. If Indians tolerated settlements they could easily have wiped out, they may have done so not because they were afraid of the settlers or kindly disposed to them or militarily weak but rather because they saw them as useful adjuncts in their own internal power struggles
Explanation:
sana makatulong(ᵔᴥᵔ)
Answer:
The answer is <u><em>A.</em></u> The Five Pillars are basically what every Muslim lives by. Oh and you formatted this really weirdly, I thought the page wasn't loading but then I scrolled all the way down.
The United States became an "isolationist" nation because of all the funds it loaned to its European allies during World War I, not to mention all of the US lives that were lost in the war as well. This is because the US felt it was wasting time, money, and American lives on a war that did not affect them.