Question 1
What is Peter’s plan to change the world?
Peter plans to change the world by writing anonymously on 'the nets' in an attempt to change world politics. Peter wants to rule the world by producing a unified world peace for him to rule.
Question 2
How does he manipulate Valentine into helping him?
Peter manipulates Valentine to help him by saying that he has changed and plans to change the world through his well-placed comments over the net. He asks Valentine to help him write anonymously in two different personas to influence world politics. They use 'throw away personas' a language and style that refines away any childish arguments and tendencies.
Question 3
What is her role in his scheme?
Valentine's role in the scheme is to ask her father to get citizens to access the net instead of student access. Peter intends to spread his ideas on the net and establish a kind of era of American peace.
Answer:
Great Britain was heavily in debt after the war and tried to recover monies by taxing colonies based on the idea that the war had been necessary to protect the colonies from the French.
Explanation:
Answer:The Germans
Explanation:The First Battle of the Marne was a battle of the First World War fought from 6 to 12 September 1914.[1] It resulted in an Allied victory against the German armies in the west. The battle was the culmination of the Retreat from Mons and pursuit of the Franco–British armies which followed the Battle of the Frontiers in August and reached the eastern outskirts of Paris.
Field Marshal Sir John French, commander of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), began to plan for a full British retreat to port cities on the English Channel for an immediate evacuation. The military governor of Paris, Joseph Simon Gallieni, wanted the Franco–British units to counter-attack the Germans along the Marne River and halt the German advance. Allied reserves would restore the ranks and attack the German flanks. On 5 September, the counter-offensive by six French armies and the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) began.
By 9 September, the success of the Franco–British counteroffensive left the German 1st and 2nd Armies at risk of encirclement, and they were ordered to retreat to the Aisne River. The retreating armies were pursued by the French and British, although the pace of the Allied advance was slow: 12 mi (19 km) in one day. The German armies ceased their retreat after 40 mi (65 km) on a line north of the Aisne River, where they dug in on the heights and fought the First Battle of the Aisne.
The German retreat between 9 September and 13 September marked the end of the attempt to defeat France by crushing the French armies with an invasion from the north through Belgium and in the south over the common border. Both sides commenced reciprocal operations to envelop the northern flank of their opponent, in what became known as the Race to the Sea which culminated in the First Battle of Ypres.
Answer: A. Arkansas territory organized.
Explanation:
<u>B is incorrect</u> because it was Missouri that would become a slave state.
<u>C is incorrect</u> because it prohibited slavery in territories or states in the Louisiana Purchase NORTH of the Arkansas-Missouri border.
<u>D is incorrect</u> because Maine came into the Union as a free state at this time not California.