Answer: As "a mongrel population too ignorant and lazy to assume the privilege of full citizenship."
Explanation:
New Mexico was initially a Spanish colony, over the years its population grew composed mainly of Mestizos, and American Indians who were the original inhabitants of the territory. Later it became part of Mexico.
In 1846 it was invaded by the United States, and later, in 1848, it was acquired by the United States, along with Arizona, as part of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and bought for 15 million dollars.
However, it was given a status of the territory, and not state, due to disagreement about declaring it a slave state or a free state, and also considering it as a Spanish colony with a very large Spanish-speaking population.
Despite this opposition, in 1912 it was officially declared the 47th state of the American Union.
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<span>First Transcontinental Railroad -
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Here's a link that should give you all of the information you need about the transcontinental railroad.</span>
a primary source is a first-hand account event examples include newspaper letters Diaries photographs sketches and music in court cases recorded history and student and professional research is must analyze primary sources carefully says they are usually a record of only a single person experience
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
The conclusion I can draw about Brandt knowing that he continued his search for precious metals after most Jamestown settlers were involved in agriculture is the following.
It seems that Sebastian Brand continued to believe that he could find precious minerals such as silver, copper, and gold in the Jamestown colony of Virginia. He maintained his hope for the great discoveries of precious rocks that he wrote a letter on January 13, 1622, to Henry Hovener, who was a merchant from the Netherlands that at the time was living in London, England.
Answer:
A. People read, saw, and heard only what the government desired and
D. Leaders came to power through secret internal power struggles.
Explanation:
The Soviet Union (USSR), (1922- 1991), did not really rob the people of their freedom. Before the creation of the USSR, the country was ruled for three centuries by Romanov czars (1613–1917). A progressive and short-lived provisional government (1917) served as a mere interregnum between the autocratic czars and totalitarian Communism. The country was not free either before or during the Soviet time. Only for a brief time in the 1990s was Russia a free country. Although the USSR did not invent the Russian dictatorship, it was more repressive and cruel than its Romanov predecessors—especially during Stalin's rule (1924–1953). When Stalin was in power, the state's control of the media was total. Those who attempted to read or listen to anything apart from what was allowed were punished.
Fear was much more pervasive during the Soviet time. The USSR had extremely efficient secret police who eliminated real or potential opponents. There were purges. Stalin-era purges led to the deaths or exile of thousands of people.
Peasants suffered more than the urban population during Soviet rule. Farms were taken over by force under Stalin. Many peasants starved or were sent into forced labour in Siberia.
After the death of Stalin in 1953, Soviet citizens enjoyed slightly more freedom. But only the last leader of the USSR, Mikhail Gorbachev, was willing to give some rights to Soviet citizens. Western-style democracy has always been alien to Russia as it has almost always been ruled by a tyrant.