the answer is 2 to let you know hope you get it right bro
Answer:
In this lesson, students explore primary and secondary sources that shed light on the underlying causes of the outbreak of World War II in Asia. Students examine the rise of Japanese Pan-Asianism, militarism, and ultranationalism, and the racial and imperialist ideologies underpinning them. They also consider Japan’s needs, as a rapidly industrializing country, for China’s natural resources, and its increasingly isolationist stance after what it perceived as mistreatment by imperial Western powers and in the League of Nations. Taken together, these sources give students insight into the complexity of the factors that led to the outbreak of war and provide a framework that will help students prepare to investigate the Nanjing atrocities in the
Answer:
The limits placed on the Federal Government are:
1) No exercise of powers not delegated to it by the Constitution.
2) No payment from the Treasury except under appropriations made by law.
3) All duties and excises must be uniform throughout the United States.
4) No tax or duty to be laid on articles exported from any state.
5) No appointment of a senator or representative to any civil office which was created while he was a member of Congress or for which the amount of compensation was increased during that period.
6) No preferences to the ports of one state over another in regulation or tax collection.
7) No titles of nobility to be granted by the U.S. government, or permitted to be granted to government officials by foreign states.
8) No bill of attainder or ex post facto law to be passed.
Answer:
Yes and no (Pick either one)
Explanation:
In a federalist view, it was awesome! They had a sense of loosely interpreting the constitution. In the democratic-republican view though, it was okay. They strictly followed the constitution and thought the federal government should not have much power, and might have not favored it as much.
But for me, I think that the Louisana purchase opened up so many oppourtunies for America such as expansion, and helped make America to what it is today.