<span>Although we see these values, we must also recognize the tremendous double standard between genders at play here. That Homer never reproaches Odysseus for his extracurricular romances but condemns the unfaithful women in the poem recalls Calypso’s angry statement about the double standard for immortals: male gods are allowed to take mortal lovers, while female goddesses are not. Likewise, men such as Odysseus have some freedom to "wander" sexually during their geographical wanderings -- so long as they are ultimately faithful to their home -- while Penelope and the other women in The Odyssey are chastised for their lack of chastity. Indeed, Odysseus does remain true to Penelope in his heart, and his desire to reunite with her drives his faithful journey. Fidelity is also central at the end of the poem, when Odysseus tests the loyalties of his servants and punishes those who have betrayed him.</span>
<span>a. It involved the lynching of a Jewish man by a mob in Cobb County. Eliminate
</span>Which statement BEST describes the "Leo Frank Case"?
NOT:
b. It involved the lynching of a Black man by a mob in Fulton County.
c. It allowed the death penalty to resume in Georgia and around the United States.
<span>d. It caused the death penalty to be halted in Georgia and around the United States.</span>
Answer:
to use the states as "laboratories" for new ideas and programs
boom baby
dont quote me on that tho
Answer:
<em>Euskadi Ta Askatasuna</em>
Explanation:
<em>Euskadi Ta Askatasuna main objectives was gaining independence for the Basque Country. The group was established in 1959 and with time grew into a group establishing traditional Basque culture to a group of paramilitary that engages kidnapping, assassinations and campaign mode of violence in Southern Basque Country and Spanish territory. </em>
True. Slavery became common within much of Europe during the Dark Ages and it continued into the Middle Ages. The Byzantine–Ottoman wars (1265–1479) and the Ottoman wars in Europe (14th to 20th centuries) resulted in the capture of large numbers of Christian slaves. The Dutch, French, Spanish, Portuguese, British, ARABS and a number of West African kingdoms played a prominent role in the Atlantic slave trade, especially after 1600.
So from what we know of, the Arab Empire enslaved Christians in 1600.