Hello there!
The question you asked is "why is it important to remember historical events?"
The answer to your question is simply that in order to stop bad things from happening in the future, we must learn from the past.
The holocaust is one example of something we don't want to repeat in the future, therefore we must study how Hitler took over Germany. A few of the things he did was took over the school systems so that he could indoctrinate the children. These children became known as the Hitler Youth. Another thing he did was take away guns from Jewish people so that they could not fight back.
If we realize what Hitler did to take over, we can stop fascist politicians in modern day times.
I hope this helps!
Best wishes:)
The neutrality proclamation stated that the United States can't take sides with European countries that are at war.
The aim of the Convention of 1818 was to settle exceptional limit issues and questions between the US and British North America following the War of 1812. An understanding between the United States and Great Brittan that settled angling rights and canceled new North American outskirts.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The significance of the Treaty of 1818 is that along with the Rush-Bagot Treaty of 1817 it marked the beginning of improved relations between the British Empire and its former colony. The border between the United States and Canada is 5,525 miles (8,891 km) long. It is the longest international boundary in the world. The treaty solved a boundary dispute that emerged from the 1783 Treaty of Paris, which ended the American Revolutionary War.
The reason why state delegates met in 1787 was "<span>to discuss a better system of government," since it had become clear by this time that the Articles of Confederation needed to at least be seriously revised. </span>
These leaders argued that by remaining committed to cotton production, the south was becoming dependent on the north for manufactured goods. These southerners also argued that factories and workshops would revive the economy of the Upper South, which was less prosperous than the cotton states.