I think the answer to this one is China.
Answer:
Oedipus
Explanation:
After defeating Polynices and taking the throne of Thebes, Creon commands that Polynices be left to rot unburied, his flesh eaten by dogs and birds, creating an “obscenity” for everyone to see (Antigone, 231). Creon thinks that he is justified in his treatment of Polynices because the latter was a traitor, an enemy of the state, and the security of the state makes all of human life—including family life and religion—possible. Therefore, to Creon’s way of thinking, the good of the state comes before all other duties and values. However, the subsequent events of the play demonstrate that some duties are more fundamental than the state and its laws. The duty to bury the dead is part of what it means to be human, not part of what it means to be a citizen. That is why Polynices’ rotting body is an “obscenity” rather than a crime. Moral duties—such as the duties owed to the dead—make up the body of unwritten law and tradition, the law to which Antigone appeals.
It doubled the size of the previous size of the us
Answer The power of the President to refuse to approve a bill or joint resolution and thus prevent its enactment into law is the veto. The president has ten days (excluding Sundays) to sign a bill passed by Congress. A regular veto occurs when the President returns the legislation to the house in which it originated, usually with a message explaining the rationale for the veto. This veto can be overridden only by a two-thirds vote in both the Senate and the House. If this occurs, the bill becomes law over the President's objections. A pocket veto occurs when Congress adjourns during the ten-day period. The president cannot return the bill to Congress. The president's decision not to sign the legislation is a pocket veto and Congress does not have the opportunity to override.
Explanation:
The imagery of "the heart" suggests a relationship of leadership and trust between the society the narrator plans to build and the outside world. It shows when says: "It (the new land or fort) will become as the heart of the earth, lost and hidden at first, but beating louder each day".
The narrator is talking about a place that will be (in the future) the main organ of the outside. Everybody is going to hear of this place and will feel attracted to it, and the brothers and their Councils will be impotent if they try to destroy it because of its effectiveness and central power.
Everything is going to depend on this place.