Answer:
<h2>
True</h2>
There is often debate over the causes that lay at the start of the Civil War. Some will say it was not primarily about slavery but about states' rights--their ability to do things their own way or even go their own way (leave the Union) if they wished. The reality is that both issues lay at the heart of why the Civil War was fought. A principal reason why the seceding states were asserting their rights and leaving was because of the issue of slavery.
John Pierce did a documentary study on "The Reasons for Secession," for <em>American Battlefield Trust. </em>He looked especially at "Declarations of Causes" documents that four of the Confederate States added to their articles of secession. The documents from those states (South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi, and Texas) showed both slavery and states' rights as the two predominant themes. As to the issue of a state's right to leave the Union, Pierce summed up the theme from the primary documents this way: "The states argue that the Union is a compact, one that can be annulled if the states are not satisfied with what they receive in return from other states and/or from the federal government."
Well in a free market economy the product is chosen by the people that consume it so that would be a advantage, but as the consumers are the ones choosing the products they might not be choosing healthy products.
With the Meiji Restoration, Japan received assistance from European powers and the US to foster industrialization. The era of centuries of isolation came to an end. There were cooperation and investment between Japan and the rest of the world. This cooperation led to academic-scientific exchanges, scholars and scientists learned from the other cultures in order to embrace elements of Modernity. Since Japan is an island with relative few raw materials, they concentrated on the sectors of production that involve the transformation of natural resources and providing later on multiple kinds of services. This went on a mass scale that positions Japan economically by the 1900s.
Some of the major factors leading to economic success:
The rapid and effective appropriation of Western techniques in industrial production.
The Meiji administration constructed national railroad systems, enhanced existing roads, and inaugurated land reforms and invested in communications industries.
Japan concentrated efforts in specific industries such as shipyards, iron smelters, and spinning mills, which were then sold to highly skilled entrepreneurs.
Answer: I think it is (B.)
Explanation:
Similarities:
Hand motifs around world, similar ancient dolmens world-wide, and pyramids.
Differences:
Metal clamps