The answer is Magnus Hirschfeld. He born in Kohlberg, Poland in 1868 and died in 1935 in Niece, France. He
studied philosophy, philology, medicine, and sexology in Germany. He was the founder of the institute for sexology, and his research of the genetic nature of homosexuality was one of the precursors of the laws against homosexuality and bisexuality.
We would have become involved some where along the way, but what pushed us to join WW2 was the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
1. Giving us the right to choose the government that represent our people.
2. Giving us the right to choose our jobs and not assigning us work we dont want.
3. They give us the freedom and fun of school. They let us learn for free about all the great topics of life like our history as humans. Also in science I learned about what I was made up of (figured out it was atoms).
Answer: Nicollo Machiavelli
Explanation: renaissance thinker. Machiavelli is not a medieval political thinker (as Dante Alighieri in his "Monarchy") anymore. His political thougths do not refer to metaphysical, divine realm. His political thought takes place in profane, secular realm.