In this video segment, from the PBS documentary Looking for Lincoln<span>, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and historian David Blight examine President Abraham Lincoln’s mixed motivations for issuing the Emancipation Proclamation. They conclude that while Lincoln ultimately recognized the moral righteousness freeing the slaves, his first and primary concern was strategic: it was the best way to rally the North and strike at the heart of the South’s economy. Gates and Blight then join a roundtable discussion of Lincoln scholars debating the legal authority of the Proclamation and its special meaning for African Americans.</span>
<span>How slaves would be counted for representation
(brainliest please)</span>
Answer:
Under Article V of the Constitution, there are two ways to propose and ratify amendments to the Constitution. To propose amendments, two-thirds of both houses of Congress can vote to propose an amendment, or two-thirds of the state legislatures can ask Congress to call a national convention to propose amendments. To ratify amendments, three-fourths of the state legislatures must approve them, or ratifying conventions in three-fourths of the states must approve them.
Explanation:
Answer:
1. Britain repealed all of the Townshend acts except the tea tax
2. the Boston tea party occurred
3. the Boston. massacre occurred
Ashkenazim lived apart from non-Jews, developed a unique culture, and spoke Yiddish.
Sephardim mixed with and borrowed from surrounding cultures, and spoke Ladino.
please give me brainliest