This is of course subjective, but two of the most important civil liberties are the right to free speech and the right to practice any religion. Many would argue that access to free healthcare and free education at all levels (including college) should be civil liberties as well.
The voyages of Christopher Columbus led to the first lasting European contact with the Americas, inaugurating a period of European exploration, conquest, and colonization that lasted for several centuries. Columbus was not the first European explorer to reach the Americas having been preceded by the Norse expedition led by Leif Erikson in the 11th century. Leif Erikson was an Icelandic explorer considered by some as the first European to land in North America (excluding Greenland), before Columbus. There is much debate as some say that many different people, spanning centuries, set foot on the New World (as the Americas were called) before Columbus, and, of course, the ancestors of the Native Americans had already discovered it many years before.
Answer and Explanation:
Many Protestant religious groups claim that vaccination is a way of preventing divine providence in the lives of the faithful.
That's because they believe that protection from disease must be achieved by faith in God, who is powerful enough to protect his children, if that is his will. In this way, they claim that if an individual takes the vaccine, he is questioning the ability and God to protect him, in addition to preventing the will of God, if he wants the individual to be sick to be healed, or taken to heaven. .
The founders saw the importance of a strong military to protect the country and its citizens, but they named the President, a civilian, the "commander in chief" of the armed services. They were ever mindful of checking and balancing power, and they did not want a military general to seize the government
Answer:
Explanation:
When war broke out in Europe in 1914 President Wilson declared that the United States would follow a strict policy of neutrality. This was a product of a longstanding idea at the heart of American foreign policy that the United States would not entangle itself with alliances with other nations.
Appointed By (if Position is Appointed): Woodrow Wilson