Answer:
Dear Founding Fathers;
Our country, much like previous times, is divided. We can only hope to take your past examples and implement measures to close this gaping chasm that has since spread between our people. Our society, though different in the way in which we dress and behave, is very similar in our basic princiapls. We still believe in equality, thogh some may be trying to belittle that law, just as much as we believe in the greatness of America. We have, however, lost sight of your warnings about foreign policies. We have begun to mess with other countries, sometimes to our downfall. Our country, so small and inncoent before, has since gained a knowledge and power rivaled by not to many other countries. Our country, despite our differences, is just as great as when you first declared the unification of these 50 states.
Explanation:
The correct answer is no. Before Magellan arrived in the Philippines, visitors, traders, and colonizers as the Malayo-Polynesians arrived at the country and over the next 2000 years, they spread across the Philippines.
The Philippines were claimed for Spain in 1521 by Ferdinand Magellan, a Portuguese explorer sailing for Spain, who named the islands in honor to King Philip II of Spain.
Who were the Pilgrims and Puritans?
The pilgrims and puritans were pioneers of the new world, this America. Coming from 1600s Britain, many of them were seeking freedom from their past lives, from the government, to find a new way of life, a more pure and sure one.
Pilgrims were separatists from the Church of England, settling in Plymouth in the 1620s, while the puritans joined in 1630 to establish the Massachusets bay colony.
What role did they play in American Journalism?
The real question is: What role didn't they play in all of America? The modern #1 nation wouldn't exist without them! They were egregious se*ist and racist monsters, that never stopped them from doing something great. Aboard the boat, a few of them had an idea and, when they came to dry land, they all signed a document in the government of our now-country, affecting journalism and many other things for years to come.
Frederick Douglass
all of these