A set of people who interact on the basis of shared expectations and who possess some degree of common identity is termed as group.
Answer: Option C
<u>Explanation:</u>
When the word “Group” is understood in sociology it direct towards a bunch of two or more people who try to interconnect or link with each other. The social group basically talks about having matching characteristics and work for common goals as they carry some amount of common identity.
Groups also direct toward moral value which is unity and power for example in general citizens of any nation are considered as a group who share some common characteristics due to which they are attached even unknowingly therefore whenever they interact out of the nation randomly they feel connected.
When Europeans began the colonization of Central and South America, they began producing agricultural products such as sugar, molasses, and cassava. When this economic activity grew the Europeans began relying on primarily slave labor. The best answer choice for this question is B.
The main way in which the structure of the First Amendment supports equal weight of each freedom it guarantees is by including them all in the same clause, which does away with superiority.
Answer: TRUE
Explanation: The siege of Bexar (San Antonio) became the first major campaign of the Texas Revolution. From October until early December 1835 an army of Texan volunteers laid siege to a Mexican army in San Antonio de Béxar. After a Texas force drove off Mexican troops at Gonzales on October 2, the Texan army grew to 300 men and elected Stephen F. Austin commander to bring unity out of discord. The Texans advanced on October 12 toward San Antonio, where Gen. Martín Perfecto de Cos recently had concentrated Mexican forces numbering 650 men. Cos fortified the town plazas west of the San Antonio River and the Alamo, a former mission east of the stream.
By the time the Texans camped along Salado Creek east of San Antonio in mid-October their numbers had grown to over 400 men, including James Bowie and Juan N. Seguín, who brought with him a company of Mexican Texans. Bowie and James W. Fannin, Jr., led an advance to the missions below San Antonio in late October, while Cos brought in 100 reinforcement men. On October 25 the democratic Texans conducted a debate over strategy. Sam Houston, who had come from the Consultation government, urged delay for training and for cannons to bombard the fortifications. Austin and others won support to continue efforts at capturing San Antonio.
From San Francisco de la Espada Mission on October 27, Austin sent Bowie and Fannin forward to Nuestra Señora de la Purísima Concepción de Acuña Mission with ninety men to locate a position nearer the town for the army. There on the foggy morning of the twenty-eighth Cos sent Col. Domingo de Ugartechea with 275 men to attack the advance force. The Texans drove off the assault from a position along the bank of the San Antonio River, inflicting over fifty casualties and capturing one cannon. Austin arrived after the battle of Concepción to urge an attack on San Antonio but found little support among his officers.
Answer:
The question refers to the Watergate Affair.
Explanation:
The Watergate affair is a term that denotes a series of political scandals during the presidential term of Richard Nixon. These events would lead to the resignation of this president on August 9, 1974.
The scandal began when five burglars who broke into the office of the Democratic National Committee at the Watergate Hotel in Washington on June 17, 1972 were arrested. The investigation was initially conducted by the FBI and later passed into the jurisdiction of the Watergate Committee, which was formed by the Senate. The investigation revealed that this burglary was just one in a series of illegal activities that included intimidation, political espionage and sabotage. Nixon's staff and people loyal to him were responsible for this. Among the illegal actions was the use of money of suspicious origin that came from Mexico, which was used, among other things, to silence seven participants in the June 17 burglary.
After two years of investigation against the president, it was established that he knew about the tapes that were recorded during the wiretapping of the Democrats. Seeing that he was threatened with impeachment, Nixon resigned ten days after the end of the investigation. Nixon's successor Gerald Ford signed a pardon for Nixon after he handed over the presidency.