Answer and Explanation:
Slavery in the United States was a paradox because it was stated in the constitution that all men are created equal, yet the same document contradicted it and there were laws such as the Virginia law passed in October 1705, stating that if a master was to kill a slave who was undergoing “correction,” it would not be considered a crime.
The Back-to-Africa Movement: also known as black Zionism or colonization movement was the the view that Americans of African ancestry should return to Africa. It failed woefully as most black Americans did not want to return to Africa. This is most likely because they didn't know the homelands of their ancestors and were not sure where to begin(afraid of starting afresh) or what the "strange land" of Africa held for them.
the Missouri compromise tried to achieve a balance of power between slave states and free states in Congress. It made Missouri a slave state and Maine a free state
The North was becoming more urban and industrial as there was the increase in population with new immigrants. The South started to lose its power in Congress.
John C. Calhoun was a South Carolina senator and was known to utilize the argument of states' rights to protect slavery in the Nullification Crisis of 1832-1833.
States' rights in American refers to the political powers that reserved only/exclusive to the U.S. state governments rather than the federal government as defined by the United States Constitution.
Secession: this is the act of withdrawing from a country or territory or state to form another government(country or territory). Advocates of secession are known as disunionists.
To avoid dissolution of the Union by appeasing both sides on the slavery issue. This is because the threat of dissolution was mainly founded on outstanding slavery issues and tension that would eventually bring about the civil war.
Please follow answers consecutively with questions above
Answer:
Augustus
Explanation:
The first Roman emperor that started to use portraiture for communicating with the people was Augustus. He used this method in order to present himself in a certain light in front of the people. Instead of going in person, Augustus was using the portraiture to deliver his basic messages to the people of his empire, and in order for this to function they had to be made in certain style for different purposes.
It depends on the situation, but in a definitional sense, irrendentism is more valid.
With the Democratic and Republican National Conventions in the books, the countdown to November 3rd has begun. The election is guaranteed to dominate the news cycle – in fact, it already is. Thousands of stories are already published every day, which reach millions of voters across traditional, digital, and social media channels.
For the next 10 weeks, Cision will track and analyze the U.S. presidential election coverage and publish our findings in a new blog series, The State of the Election. You can expect nonpartisan, data-first insights to understand how the public is consuming and engaging with election coverage before, during and after the campaign all right here in this blog post.
2020 is a year of firsts. For the first time in modern history, U.S. party conventions were unable to be held in person. There was no applause, cheers, or laughs; speeches were scripted for a virtual audience. But the symbolic nature did not change. The conventions jump-start the campaigns and serve as an opportunity to introduce each party’s platform, policies, and objectives for the upcoming election. Each night of the 2020 Democratic and Republican National Conventions attracted approximately 20 million viewers. The eight days of combined programming sparked thousands of news articles, reaching millions more.
Through a comparative lens, we looked at earned media coverage for both the DNC and RNC. The data revealed, the RNC generated 1,000 more articles than the DNC from August 16th to August 29th. Compared to the 2016 convention, the earned media coverage is eye-opening. RNC coverage increased by 15.6%, whereas DNC coverage decreased by 61%
Answer:
Answer: 1. More soldiers and more workers
2. Other than shipping, railroads were the fastest way to travel in the time period. With fewer miles of railroad, Southern troops would have fewer options for fast travel to where they would be needed.
3. Quality of troops or leadership, amount of money available, guns and gunpowder already available