Most time, the women in ancient Asia assert their independence by claiming that she is oldest living member of the family if the husband dies.
<h3>What was the common woman role in ancient Asia?</h3>
During the ancient Asia, majority of women worked in the home weaving silk and caring for the silkworms that produced it.
Despite that they played a main role in production, the gender was mostly restricted to conventional role and not accommodated in government authority and were seen as inferior to male.
Hence, the the women in ancient Asia assert their independence by claiming that she is oldest living member of the family if the husband dies.
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<span>Foreign investors owned a greater amount US stocks, bonds, and factories than investors in the US owned of assets in foreign markets.
In 1985, the <em>New York Times</em> reported, "U.S. Turns into Debtor Nation," because a Commerce Department report showed the US "owing foreigners more then they owe it." By that they meant that "foreign ownership of American factories, real estate, stocks and bonds exceeded American ownership of foreign assets."
However, there's another way to look at this picture than the "debtor nation" label. The Heritage Foundation (a conservative group) noted in 1985 that having foreign investors pursuing assets in the United States indicated strong confidence by those investors in </span><span>the </span>American<span> economy. You invest in a country's assets because you think those assets will grow in value. So, becoming a "debtor nation" can be viewed as a sign of economic health in the eyes of the rest of the world.</span>
The Spanish were looking for gold. This is part of the 3 systems, these were things people came to the new world for. It was GOD GOLD AND GLORY, But the Spanish came for Gold
The Cuban Missile crisis<span> comes to a close as Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev agrees to remove Russian </span>missiles<span> from </span>Cuba<span> in exchange for a promise from the United States to respect </span>Cuba's<span> territorial sovereignty. ... The </span>consequences<span> of the</span>crisis<span> were many and varied.
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