I dont get the question ur looking for
The correct items:
1. All foreign countries had to pay taxes equally.
3. Only the Chinese government could collect tariffs on trade.
4. Countries with a sphere of influence should maintain free access to their ports.
The Open Door policy was issued by the United States in 1899-1900 as a series of dispatches from the US Secretary of State to other nations that had trading interests in China -- Great Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, and Russia. The policy reasserted earlier agreements that all countries should have equal access to ports in China, without undue preference to "spheres of influence" for one nation or another. The United States was seeking to maintain an equal footing with other nations in the access to trade in China.
It was the law of recostruction, passed on March 2, 1867, which envisaged the vote of black people in the election of the delegates drafting the new state constitutions in the southern United States. To restore political autonomy, such states should extend the "privilege" of voting to black men over twenty-one. If indeed in that context the vow was thought of as a privilege, and not exactly as a right, the data to be observed was that such privilege, for the first time, was recorded in a law referring to the ex-slave states, as an independent exercise of race, color or condition.
The political climate following the first Reconstruction Law stimulated discussions about black citizenship rights. In 1868, Congress ratified Amendment XIV, taking the issue of black citizenship to the center of national political discussion. The Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution established citizenship as an attribute of persons born in the United States, or naturalized therein, thus independent of the origin or the previous condition of the subject. It was thus indicated that both blacks and former slaves enjoyed general political rights in the nation and in their states of residence. Such states, moreover, should be punished with the diminution of representation in the Federal Congress if they did not respect the voting rights of the blacks.
Answer:
yes
Explanation:
liberties granted by King John on June 15, 1215, under threat of civil war and reissued, with alterations, in 1216, 1217, and 1225. By declaring the sovereign to be subject to the rule of law and documenting the liberties held by “free men,” the Magna Carta provided the foundation for individual rights