The historian who interprets the journal entry would most likely conclude that the entry contains no bias because it is an opinion. Thus, option B is correct.
<h3>What is an election? </h3>
An election is a process of choosing a candidate from many candidates by the way of casting votes, that is, those who have more votes will win the election. Elections can be held in schools, cities, or offices, basically anywhere.
The Historian who will read the book will understand that in an election people will be having a preference for a single candidate and if he is being praised that won't be a big issue too. Therefore, option B is the correct option.
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Borders of Israel
The current borders of the State of Israel are the result both of war and of diplomatic agreements among Israel, her neighbors, and colonial powers. Uniquely, only two of Israel's five potential land borders are internationally recognized while the other three are disputed.[1] Israel's borders with Egypt and Jordan have now been formally recognized and confirmed as part of the peace treaties with those countries. The borders with Syria (Golan Heights), Lebanon (Shebaa farms) and the Palestinian territories (declared as the State of Palestine) are still in dispute.[2]
According to the Green Line of the 1949 Armistice Agreements, Israel borders Lebanon in the north, the Golan Heights and Syria in the northeast, the West Bank and Jordan in the east, the Gaza Strip and Egypt in the southwest. The border with Egypt is the international border demarcated in 1906 between the United Kingdom and the Ottoman Empire, confirmed in the 1979 Egypt–Israel Peace Treaty, and the border with Jordan is based on the border defined in the 1922 Trans-Jordan memorandum, confirmed in the 1994 Israel–Jordan peace treaty.
William Penn, the founding character of the colony of Pennsylvania was a Quaker-Whig who sought the opportunity for religious choice and absence of oppression which he faced in England. When determining the founding principles for Pennsylvania Penn relied on self-governance and freedom of religion and religious practices.
Initially, the settlers of Pennslyvania and Penn were in agreement about the structure of government needed in the colony, however, over time the representative body sought the right to pass laws over the people living the town, something Penn opposed. None the less, Penn endorsed representative government over self-governance and agreed to the passage of laws in the colony.
The answer would be a brought an end to the reconstruction
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