<span>Before the
Civil War, citizens saw the national government as a distant, even foreign, entity.
</span>
Before Civil War there were of lot of elements contributing
in the concept of a distant, even foreign, entity. For example
slavery and state rights had become inseparably knotted to each other until
186, the national government’s power over the states, the way South lived and
many more were the causes of the concept.
Television can create a shared experience and a feeling that people are members of a collective, despite lacking in proximity to one another. This is called:<u> Imagined communities</u>
<h3>What is Imagined communities?</h3>
In his 1983 book Imagined Communities, Benedict Anderson introduced the idea of an imagined community as a way to examine nationalism. According to Anderson, a country is a socially constructed community that its citizens who identify as belonging to a particular group imagine.
<h3>What does the concept imagined communities refer to?</h3>
Imagined communities are groups of people who all identify as part of a single community even if they may never interact with the majority of the other group members.
To know more about Imagined communities visit:
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I don't know what your options were, but here are some stated purposes of war (stated formally or informally):
-removal of Saddam Hussein from the power
-being able to check for any existing biological, chemical or nuclear weapons that Hussein might have
-introducing democracy to Iraq:
Answer:
Groundwater
Groundwater is defined as water that is found beneath the surface of the Earth in conditions of 100 percent saturation (if it is less than 100 percent saturation, then the water is considered soil moisture).
I am not really understanding your question.