1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Diano4ka-milaya [45]
3 years ago
12

What does Thomas Jefferson mean when he writes: "...that they[men] are endowed (provided) by their Creator with certain unaliena

ble Rights (rights that CANNOT be taken away), that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." (Make sure to fully explain your answer)
Social Studies
2 answers:
liraira [26]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

It means that the people have a right to be free and have their own rights as citizen.

Explanation:

Natalka [10]3 years ago
3 0
Someone answered already so i need points just by answering
You might be interested in
Which tire inflation information should be checked to determine the proper tire inflation pressure?
vitfil [10]

Cold placard inflation pressure. tire inflation information should be checked to determine the proper tire inflation pressure.

Inflationary pressures are the underlying causes of inflation. these pressures are the reason that the manufacturing of goods increases to satisfy or exceed customer calls or that expenses boom due to loss of supply. Inflationary pressures reason the economy to regulate because of delivery and demand.

Right tire inflation facilitates saving you expanded wear that results in untimely tire replacement and is also crucial to protection. Tires that are pushed beneath-inflated generate excessively excessive warmness stages which can weaken the tire to the factor of failure.

Proper tire inflation allows for preventing improved put-on that ends in an untimely tire alternative and is also essential to safety. Tires that might be driven below-inflated generate excessively excessive warmness degrees which could weaken the tire to the factor of failure.

Learn more about inflation here:

brainly.com/question/777738

#SPJ4

4 0
2 years ago
21. Why were colonists so angry with Britain in the first place?
Ivahew [28]

Answer:

Explanation:

They had to pay high taxes to the king. They felt that they were paying taxes to a government where they had no representation. They were also angry because the colonists were forced to let British soldiers sleep and eat in their homes.

8 0
3 years ago
________ pioneered the empirical study of the basic principles of classical conditioning.
Bezzdna [24]
Ivan Pavlov was the one who came up with the basic principles of classical conditioning. 
Pavlov was a Russian scientist of the 19th and 20th centuries who experimented with classical conditioning, a term he coined. He wanted to show the importance of stimuli when trying to teach someone something. His experiment involved a dog, a bell which he sounded when he wanted to feed the dog, and food. The dog would soon associate the sound of the bell with his upcoming food, and thus would start to salivate even before seeing his food (because he developed a conditioned reflex/response to the bell). 
7 0
4 years ago
¿Cuáles son los principales problemas medioambientales? Explique brevemente.
Oksanka [162]

Answer:

Un problema ambiental es un cambio que ha tenido lugar o se está produciendo en el medio ambiente que una persona encuentra problemático por alguna razón. Normalmente, solo los cambios provocados por el hombre se consideran problemas ambientales: los desastres naturales como terremotos o tormentas, por ejemplo, generalmente no se consideran problemas ambientales. Los problemas ambientales actuales a menudo se consideran relacionados, entre otras cosas, con el consumo excesivo y la superpoblación, el agotamiento de los recursos, la industrialización, la desigualdad y la pobreza, la ignorancia o la tecnología subdesarrollada.

Los fenómenos comunes considerados problemas ambientales incluyen el cambio climático, la eutrofización, el agotamiento del ozono, la erosión, la acidificación del suelo y el agua, la contaminación ambiental y el agotamiento de la biodiversidad, por ejemplo en forma de extinciones de especies.

3 0
3 years ago
How do corruption and undemocratic government contribute to proverty in West and Central Africa?
bekas [8.4K]

Answer:

Corruption has acquired the status of a continental emergency in Africa. But this is not another pontification on corruption. Rather, it is a polemical disavowal of a few popular stereotypes and fallacies on corruption in Africa. It is laced, for good measure, with a few contrarian perspectives on the phenomenon.

One of the most insightful attempts to explain the cultural basis of political corruption in Africa contends that patronage ties between regular Africans and the political elite place informal obligations and demands on the latter, obligations which are often fulfilled through corrupt enrichment. Corruption in this explanation has many participants besides the politician or bureaucrat who actually engages in the act. It is an explanation that understands corruption through the prism of mass complicity and cultural toleration.

This explanation captures some of the reality of corruption in Africa. The typical African politician does not only grapple with financial pressure from family but also from kin, clan, hometown, and ethnic constituents. Indeed, the network of people that makes corrupt acts possible and sometimes undetectable includes not just politicians and state bureaucrats but also family members, friends, ethically challenged financial and legal experts, and traditional institutions of restraint. In Africa, corruption is indeed a group act.

Because of the absence of state welfare institutions in much of Africa, political constituents expect politicians representing them to cater to their quotidian and small-scale infrastructural needs. It is generally understood and quietly tolerated that a politician has to rely on his informal access to public funds to satisfy these informal requests for patronage and largesse. Many Africans euphemistically call this “patronage politics.” They may tolerate and normalize it as African grassroots politics. To Western observers, it is corruption at its crudest.

One can argue that this is a product of the nexus of over-centralized power, access to resources, and ethnic competition (which are features of most African countries), but this hardly accounts for the multi-ethnic and socially diverse cast of actors in most corruption scandals in Africa. Or for the fact that in much of continent, corruption is often the reason why overly centrist, patrimonial, and illogical states endure and not vice versa. The tragedy of many African countries—Nigeria particularly stands out—is that corruption and patronage politics are the recurring baselines of political compromise and consensus among self-interested but bitterly divided political elites.

True as it may be, it is very easy to overtate the argument about how the nature of the states inherited from colonial times sustains corruption in Africa. Such an overstatement often elides more socially embedded, low-level, and less obvious platforms that support and legitimize corrupt acts—or at least make them seem normal. This pseudo-cultural normalization of corruption is one of the biggest obstacles in the way entrenching transparency in government bureaucracies in Africa.

Nothing encapsulates this reality more than the pervasive Nigerian fad of traditional chieftaincy institutions dolling out titles to citizens whose source of wealth is questionable at best. What does one make of African universities that routinely give out honorary degrees to patently corrupt donors? Or churches and mosques that project demonstrably corrupt members as models of piety, accomplishment, and Godly favour?

What these practices do is to invest and implicate many Africans indirectly in the phenomenon of corruption. They are subtle and invidious, but they work to co-opt many Africans, even without their self-conscious consent, into the cultural and religious contexts in which corrupt acts and corrupt persons find rehabilitation and validation.

The result is that many Africans, even while expressing outrage against corruption privately, are publicly indifferent to its manifestation, especially if they are situated in social networks that benefit from the patronage politics through which corruption thrives. As a result they may feel too culturally complicit to take a stand. This kind of complicity makes official policy against corruption difficult because it mitigates the public pressure necessary for official action against corruption.

But Africans also draw clear moral lines in their narrative on corruption. Their tolerance for patronage and its lubrication by state resources does not prevent them from condemning the abuse of this kind of politics by greedy politicians. Nor does it blind them to the political excess of treasury looting for purely personal enrichment.

3 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • ________ refers to organized and systematic efforts to remove people from the criminal justice process by placing them in progra
    9·1 answer
  • Name 3 ways the automobile changed american life
    7·1 answer
  • Which of the statments below is not a reason to avoid bias? A. It reinforces stereotypes. B. It creates barriers. C. It leads to
    10·1 answer
  • What legendary underdog defeated goliath in an ancient biblical fight?
    5·1 answer
  • What is manifest destiny and what were the positives and negatives?
    9·1 answer
  • When hitlers was young he wanted to be?
    10·1 answer
  • Which influential third party of the late 1800s caused the Democratic party to push for reforms?
    15·2 answers
  • According to the passage, what were some of Carter’s goals when he became governor? Check all that apply.
    11·2 answers
  • Mention the important teaching of Hinduism​
    7·1 answer
  • Suspending judgment means a listener should Multiple choice question. mentally argue with the speaker to avoid being unfairly pe
    15·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!