Answer:
according to Article II of the Constitution the President has the following powers:
Serve as commander in chief of the armed forces.
Commission officers of the armed forces.
Grant reprieves and pardons for federal offenses (except impeachment)
Convene Congress in special sessions.
Receive ambassadors.
Explanation:
Answer:
sorry its actually A. colorful
France and Britain responded to the Emancipation Proclamation by refusing to recognize the Confederacy. declaring their support for slavery in the South. forming a trade alliance with the Confederacy. sending ambassadors to settle the Civil War.
The United States and Soviet Union reacted to the split nation of China by supporting superset state nationalist (United States) and by providing military, financial and technical aid to the communists or the Maoists (Soviet Union) though the provision by the Soviet Union did not last long.
Answer:
(Hope this helps can I pls have brainlist (crown)☺️)
Explanation:
In late July, the worst of the Great Fear riots erupted in Dauphiné, in south-eastern France. Peasant gangs began a five-day orgy of devastation in Bourgoin, ransacking and destroying various châteaux until they were dispersed by volunteer troops from Lyons and Grenoble. Unless they attempted to resist, the nobility were not injured.
In the spring of 1789, the situation became grave as France faced its greatest food shortage in years. Even the peasants' own little food supplies were depleting while multitudes in the metropolis starved or gave up nearly all of their paychecks for even.
The political turmoil of 1788-1789 also shook peasant communities. The assembly of the Estates-General and the writing of the cahiers instilled hope and expectation across the land. The act of producing the cahiers had brought peasants together to talk about their problems and voice their frustrations, notably about the weight of royal taxes and feudal dues.
In late July, these worries of royal and aristocratic retaliation grew tremendously. The power of gossip only grew stronger as peasant dissatisfaction grew (as the great historian Lefebvre phrased it, "fear fed dread").
The Great Fear had some organisation and leadership in certain villages and small towns. The residents gathered on the village green or square to hear from their elected officials. Some people decided to go on the offensive against suspected counter-revolutionaries.
Great Fear, French Grande Peur, a moment of fear and unrest by peasants and others during the French Revolution, amid rumours of a "aristocratic conspiracy" by the monarch and the privileged to topple the Third Estate.