Answer:
hmmmm i believe it was minerals like gold and silver but they also could of traded animal caucuses
Explanation:
Answer:
Option B.
Explanation:
After the December 7, 1941, Japanese attack on the American naval fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the U.S. was thrust into World War II (1939-45), and everyday life across the country was dramatically altered. Food, gas and clothing were rationed.
<span> Okay since I don't know what the full question is, I can tell you this about social stratification and economic ranks:
Social stratification, in its most general sense, is a sociological concept that refers to the fact that both individuals and groups of individuals are conceived of as constituting higher and lower differentiated strata, or classes, in terms of some specific or generalized characteristic or set of characteristics. Borrowed by analogy from the earth sciences, the term “social stratification” has come into general sociological use only since about 1940, although the matters to which it refers have been discussed under the heading “social class” for a very long time. However, in contrast to its earth-science usage the sociological usage of the concept of stratification often includes, implicitly or explicitly, some evaluation of the higher and lower layers, which are judged to be better or worse according to a scale of values. Such matters as relative moral worth, relative equality and inequality, and degrees of justice and injustice are often involved in the concept of social stratification. The concept is therefore widely used in political, ideological, and moral debate and controversy, as well as in social science analysis. But despite the difficulty of separating the context of moral and ideological controversy, on the one hand, from that of social science analysis, on the other, considerable progress, both theoretical and empirical, has been made in the study of social stratification during the last one hundred years. A brief history of this progress provides some necessary background for assessing where social stratification theory stands today and for laying out a conceptual model of what that theory might be in the future.</span>
By order of what makes sense, assuming you are going Box 1 -> Box 4:
Box 1: Romans worshiped many gods.
Box 2: They (the Romans) saw Zealots as radical troublemakers.
Why?
Box 3: They followed the laws and rules of the Torah.
Which states that:
Box 4: God, not the government, was the highest authority.
In this case, the first box sets the reason of this statement. The Romans worshipped many gods, however, they are not above the government, as it is a government instituted religion. They saw the Zealots as radicals, because they followed their own religion, instead of the Roman one. While the Roman one places the Emperor as equal to their gods, and that the government had the greatest authority, the Zealots, instead, placed their faith in their God, which created their natural laws that they follow, instead of the Roman government one.
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