(Take this response with a grain of salt.)
I personally think that neither should determine that. Both questions are unable to determine whether the religion is true; so why would it be used to determine whether or not people have the right to follow it. However, putting that aside, I think the best answer would be how good their followers are. It doesn't determine whether the religion is true or not but it rids us of the toxic religions that spread negative messages. Considering how much racism, homophobia, transphobia, and sexism is in most religions it'd be interesting to see most religions cease.
Including commonly followed religions like Catholicism.
The greatest thing that the nation had to do was get through the Great Depression. The Depression was the thing that was hurting everyone.
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
King Tut ruled Egypt until he died at age 16 or 17. Not much is known about the young king, he is not famous but archaeologists uncovered his tomb. In fact his tomb is more famous than he is.
Personal computers have allowed people to access a wealth of information that was not available before.
Before the personal computer and the internet, many people relied on television, newspapers, books, libraries, and magazines for a majority of their information. Now, thanks to the personal computer, people can access information much easier through the internet. There are websites for everything, allowing people to learn more from their homes.
Answer:
in my opinion, I agree with this assertion.
Explanation:
Because slave labor was vital to the southern economy and to other places around the world, it became apparent that the south, with a already strained relation with the north, would ally with outside countries to protect its economy. However, classifying the war as a war to free slaves is redundant as political tensions more closely characterized hateful views between the north and south. So with already strained tensions between the north and south, it was unlikely that slaves could have been freed diplomatically.