Answer:
1. The president is in custody of the U.S. Armed Forces which includes Navy, Army, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard. The President determines where troops shall be commissioned, where ships shall be transferred, and how weapons shall be used. All armed officers obtain orders from the President regarding war Resolutions.
2. The office of the president is important and the nation needs stronger leadership
Explanation:
The powers of the modern presidency have been shaped by a combination of constitutional and evolutionary powers. The forceful personalities of strong Presidents have expanded the role far beyond the greatest fears of the anti-federalists of the late 1700s.
The Constitution explicitly assigned the president the power to sign or veto legislation, command the armed forces, ask for the written opinion of their Cabinet, convene or adjourn Congress, grant reprieves and pardons, and receive ambassadors. Therefore; the office of the president is important and the nation needs stronger leadership.
No they were all about themselves and didn’t care for their colonies their colonies was a way to better their own lives like instead of caring for india their colony at the time they starved the nation to feed their own nation leaving 4 million bengalies to die and when talking about Indians Churchill Britain’s poster child said they were a beastly people with a. Beastly religion and blamed the famine on Indians breeding like rabbits not his greed
Most Americans were in the middle of happy but a little mad. It helped get Reagan elected because he was part of that.
The African Great Lakes nation of Tanzania dates formally from 1964, when it was formed out of the union of the much larger mainland territory of Tanganyika and the coastal archipelago of Zanzibar. The former was a colony and part of German East Africa from the 1880s to 1919, when, under the League of Nations, it became a British mandate. It served as a military outpost during World War II, providing financial help, munitions, and soldiers. In 1947, Tanganyika became a United Nations Trust Territory under British administration, a status it kept until its independence in 1961. Zanzibar was settled as a trading hub, subsequently controlled by the Portuguese, the Sultanate of Oman, and then as a British protectorate by the end of the nineteenth century.
Julius Nyerere, independence leader and "baba wa taifa for Tanganyika" (father of the Tanganyika nation), ruled the country for decades, assisted by Abeid Amaan Karume, the Zanzibar Father of Nation. Following Nyerere's retirement in 1985, various political and economic reforms began. He was succeeded in office by President <span>Ali Hassan Mwinyi</span>