Britain and France never officially helped or recognized the Confederacy. Reason was the institution of slavery, which was illegal in Britain and France.
Answer:
Eric Lomax, a former British soldier who was tortured by the Japanese while he was a prisoner during World War II and half a century later forgave one of his tormentors — an experience he recounted in a memoir, “The Railway Man” — died on Monday in Berwick-upon-Tweed, England.
Explanation:
Mr. Lomax, who was born in Scotland, was 19 when he joined the Royal Corps of Signals in 1939. He was one of thousands of British soldiers who surrendered to the Japanese in Singapore in 1942. Many were relocated to Thailand and forced to build the Burma Railway, also known as the Death Railway.
The building of the railroad and the brutality involved was portrayed in “The Bridge on the River Kwai,” the 1957 film directed by David Lean.
Mr. Lomax was repeatedly beaten and interrogated after his captors found a radio receiver he had made from spare parts. Multiple bones were broken and water was poured into his nose and mouth. One of his constant torturers stood out: Nagase Takashi, an interpreter.
You can talk about the boarder crisis along the Estonian boarder and Russian boarder. The is called a crisis because there is a tradition steeped kingdom called the Seto caught directly in the middle of it(their kingdom is split half and half).
<span>rench sociologist and political theorist Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-1859) traveled to the United States in 1831 to study its prisons and returned with a wealth of broader observations that he codified in “Democracy in America” </span>
Answer:
I believe the answer is A. Changes in which Political party controlled Congress
Explanation:
When the Constitution was formed, it was not formed to be a document that favors one political party over the other. It was made to be a neutral document that protects American citizens rights. That is why the Supreme Court uses the Constitution to interpret laws and decide on major court cases.