The correct answer is C.
In 1867, the political battle between President Johnson and Congress over southern Reconstruction came to a confrontation. And 1877 Congress passed Electoral Count Act Hayes became president Hayes removed remaining troops from the South to end Reconstruction. The Republicans promised that if Hayes was elected, he would withdraw the last of the federal troops from the south, allowing the only remaining Republican Reconstruction governments to collapse.
Effects of Tyranny:
1.) It hurts the People.
2.) It inflicts pain and suffering upon the lives of the People
3.) the People have to deal with the chaos and uncertainty that comes
4.) have to live with tyranny that can do what it wants when it wants
5.) the People do not matter at all
6.) they have pain caused by tyranny's actions
Effects of Slavery:
1.) Family seperation
2.) Inhibited family formation
3.) Made unstable, insecure family life
3.) Slaves were considered property
4.) Brought unique constrictions, disruptions, frustrations, and pain
5.) Unpaid labor
6.) Possibility of Abuse
The connections between these effects of tyranny and slavery is that they are unfair and go against the possibility of "Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness".
Answer:
Airplanes
Explanation:
Commercial and Freight aviation has come a long way. From using out dated B-16 bombers for passengers we are now using beautiful technology like Boeing-747-400, Airbus A-380, and the massive and intimidating freighter AN-225. Imagine the fact that we come from a small 2 passenger glide with one propeller to Fighter Jets that can go more then 400 KM/H all over the world like the American F-18 or the American Stealth B-2 bomber. Commercial aviation also came a long way. Before we used B-16 airplanes that couldn't fly high up which caused turbulence and discomfort. The break thru in aviation was the first ever commercial airliner to break the Altitude of 43,000 feet was the Boeing 747-100.
The Second Barons' War (1264–1267) was a civil war in England between the forces of a number of barons led by Simon de Montfort against the royalist forces of King Henry III, led initially by the king himself and later by his son, the future King Edward I. The barons sought to force the king to rule with a council of barons rather than through his favourites.