As a result, for the most part, the English colonies in the North America were business ventures. They provided an outlet fir England’s surplus population and (in some cases) more religious freedom than England did, but their primary putpose was to make money for their sponsors.
Answer:
Anarchists
Explanation:
Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were two Italian Americans who were convicted of murdering a guard and a paymaster during an armed robbery in Massachusetts in 1920. They were executed in 1927. The two men were adhered to an anarchist movement, and this factor, along with racial prejudice, is believed to have played a large role in their conviction. However, many people suspected their innocence, and in recent times, there is evidence that points towards a wrongful execution.
The contentious, 5–4 Supreme Court decision of <span>Bush v. Gore.
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<span>Ultimately, Bush won 271 electoral votes, one more than was necessary
for the majority, and narrowly lost the popular vote to Gore.</span>
Answer:
Michio Kaku established the nineteenth and twentieth centuries as an "Age of Discovery" in "Choreographers of Matter, Life, and Intelligence
d) by listing the significant scientific developments of the era.
Explanation:
According to Michio Kaku during the XIX and XX century the humans have discovered the most uses for advance technology and these discoveries act as the base for future developments of the civilization.
He believes that in the year 2100 the humans will be able to move objects with the mind and the computers would read minds.
<span>Under current economic models, corporations are globalized, You can communicate with someone in China as if you're talking to your next door neighbor. If the US were to remain isolated from other nations, it would negatively impact trade that has become a part of our daily lives - for everything from rice to oil to silicon. Trade is what drives economies and policy. To maintain and improve quality of life, which, in my opinion, should be the goal of any civilization, it must take into account globalization. To not follow this policy would make life as we know it extremely difficult to sustain. At the same time, necessity is the mother of invention. If we shut out ourselves from fellow civilizations, we may soon discover a new energy source; but we can look at one current example of a country that has shut out all other countries - North Korea. I don't know if the citizens are truly happy there, I assume not, from what I've heard of the people who try to escape, and it seems that not allowing your citizens basic medical needs which are available everywhere else in the world, but instead you let them suffer (National Geographic has a documentary on one such topic), this seems completely inhumane.
At any rate, this is not a black and white issue, there are many pieces to the puzzle that must be addressed to let us know if this policy would be beneficial to the citizens of the country. Many policies need to be put into place and maky problems must be solved in order to maintain a happy population.</span>