Answer:
These are the answer choices associated with the question:
A. Mexico feared Texas was becoming too powerful and they might lose control.
B. It prevented more empresarios from entering Texas and bringing colonists.
C. Slavery became illegal throughout Coahuila and all of Mexico
D. The location of the state capital was too far away for Texans to participate in government.
And this is the correct answer:
C. Slavery became illegal throughout Coahuila and all of Mexico
Explanation:
Texas colonists from the United States, like Stephen F Austin, mostly came from the Deep South (with many others coming from Appalachia), and because of this, they wanted to expand the plantation economy of the Deep South in Eastern Texas, and for that, they needed slaves.
However, slavery had become illegal in Mexico, and this is the main reason why they opposed the Union of Coahuila and Texas. Their main goal was to make Texas an independent nation, and then, to ask for annexation with the United States.
The answer is d, because ratifying treaties and making final decisions is the presidents job. Option C, does not seem to make sense. Remember, the job of the secretary is to put foreign policy into action. So the answer is d.
Answer:
Brainiest
Explanation:
While Hitler marched across Europe, the Japanese continued their war in the Pacific. In 1939 the United States dissolved its trade treaties with Japan. In 1940 the American Neutrality Acts cut off supplies of necessary war materials by embargoing oil, steel, rubber, and other vital goods. It was hoped that economic pressure would shut down the Japanese war machine. Instead, Japan’s resource-starved military launched invasions across the Pacific to sustain its war effort. The Japanese called their new empire the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere and, with the cry of “Asia for the Asians,” made war against European powers and independent nations throughout the region. Diplomatic relations between Japan and the United States collapsed. The United States demanded Japan withdraw from China; Japan considered the oil embargo a de facto declaration of war.