If the options include Gandhi's death, one of them would be it.
C. Female children in Sparta were sequestered (hidden indoors)
(My answer depends on what textbook you are reading or were your text is to support it)
Well, technically, this is false. The Test Ban Treaty of 1963 prohibited nuclear weapons testing in the atmosphere, in outer space, and under water, but it didn't ban testing underground. However, it does prohibit nuclear explosions underground if they cause "radioactive debris" and contaminate the living surroundings.
Answer:
Down below, hope it helps!
Explanation:
*A hook is created to grab the reader's attention...
Here's an example, feel free to use it if you want to :)
Typically, in the United States of America, U.S citizens are seen as important, they're our people, they matter. But what if they're not necessarily white? President Roosevelt declared the Japanese Americans were a threat to national security. This is ironic because 70% of the Japanese people imprisoned were actually American Citizens. The U.S president claiming that it's own citizens are a threat to national security is extremely unjustified, therefore, Roosevelt was not justified in ordering executive order 9066.
It seems to me as if somewhere along the road, these Enlightenment ideas were in a way corrupted.<span> </span>The killing of the King is understandable because he is a symbol of the old way of government. Even killing the highest, most elite of the government was understandable. But killing every last government associate and even priests seems like a very noticeable turn from the traditional Enlightenment philosophies of Jean-Jacques and Voltaire.