This event started in 1845.
Answer: Heyo Kenji Here! Here's your answer- Seattle lies on the southeastern shore of Puget Sound, a deep 100-mile- (160-km-) long inlet of the northern Pacific Ocean. The central portion of the city faces Elliott Bay, a deep-floored extension. At Shilshole Bay, to the northwest, Puget Sound is joined by the 8-mile- (13-km-) long Lake Washington Ship Canal.
Explanation: Hope this helps!
Have a nice day!
- Kenji
<u>Three main events of the Boston Tea Party were</u>: 1. <em><u>The arrival in Boston of three ships, "Beaver, Dartmouth, and Eleanor" with 340 chests of tea belonging to British East India Company tea.</u></em> The tax on tea, implemented with the passing of the 1767 Townshend Revenue Act, had to be paid twenty days after the arrival of the tea. The deadline to pay the tax was December 17, 1773. 2. The night before the deadline, December 16th, <em><u>The Sons of Liberty, a Patriot political organization, disguised as Mohawk Indians, destroyed and dumped the tea into the Boston Harbor as a protest</u></em> against the tax on tea and the monopoly of British East India Company on all tea exportation to the colonies. 3. <u>The Boston Tea Party</u> was a <em><u>triggering event for the start of the war and a principal reason why the American Revolutionary War started in Massachusetts</u></em>.
Answer:
Let us assume that Jimmy Carter is an intelligent, decent, hardworking man. Assume, moreover, that he has appointed to his cabinet and sub-cabinet many men and women who are experienced and dedicated. How, then, can a president—certainly no less mentally alert than most past presidents—with many advisers of high caliber, produce such an undistinguished presidency?
It’s a puzzlement. And it cannot be accounted for by most of the explanations currently in vogue, such as: Carter’s an outsider who really doesn’t understand the levers of national governance; or Carter surrounds himself with a “Georgia Mafia” whose weaknesses are the same as his own; or Carter is a bad manager who hasn’t been able to sort out decisions that a president must make from those that should be settled at lower levels; or Congress is so uncontrollable that it will not allow any president to exercise the reins of leadership; or the bureaucracy has grown beyond the span of presidential control; or many of the nation’s problem’s are highly intractable; or even all these reasons taken together—although there is truth in all.
I would like to put forward another theory: The root of the problem is that Jimmy Carter is the first Process President in American history.
“Process President”—using a definition by Aaron Wildavsky and Jack Knott—means that Carter places “greater emphasis on methods, procedures and instruments for making policy than on the content of policy itself.”
Carter is an activist. He wants to do things. Yet his campaign statements should have warned us that save for the human rights thrust in foreign policy, his passion in government is for how things are done, rather than what should be done.
He believes that if the process is good the product will be good. In other words, if he sets up a procedure for making policy that is open, comprehensive (his favorite word), and involves good people, whatever comes out of this pipeline will be acceptable (within certain budgetary limits).
Explanation:
Hoover was an economic conservative, and did not believe in federal intervention in the natural cycles of the economy. It is worth noting that the thought the Depression would be much shorter than it turned out to be. He was also fearful of establishing a permanent situation in which the economy was dependent upon the government, especially with regard to welfare programs.
Hoover's fear was that the country would be permanently weaker if welfare programs were introduced, or if the federal government became overly involved in the banking system. Towards the end of his administration, as the Depression dragged on, Hoover conceded a bit on this point, and introduced some Federal lending programs to bail some financial institutions. The answer is A.