The Mongols and the Muslims had very different beliefs and stand points when it came to religion and organization of the society. The Mongols were pagan and during the existence of their empire big portion of them started to accept Buddhism. Unlike what their reputation was, the Mongols were actually very liberal for their time, as they didn't were not forcing people to convert to their religion, were supportive of other religion, and they were actually encouraging good relations and tolerance between the different groups. The Muslims were the opposite. They believed that everyone should live under Sharia law, everyone should be converted to Islam, and they were not tolerant at all toward other religions. This of course led to tensions and conflict between the two sides.
Charter culture or charter group. In plural societies, the early arriving ethnic group that created the first effective settlement and established the recognized cultural norms to which other, later groups are expected to conform
Https://www.tamaqua.k12.pa.us/cms/lib07/PA01000119/Centricity/Domain/119/TheAgeofImperialism.pdf
Historians have labeled the years from 1870-1914 as the period of the Second Industrial Revolution. While the First Industrial Revolution caused the growth of industries, such as coal, iron, railroads and textiles, the Second Industrial Revolution witnessed the expansion of electricity, petroleum and steel.
Answer: A) Liberty versus stability and order
Explanation:
Scenario not attached but this should be the correct answer.
In the debate about surveillance in the United States, the principles of liberty and stability and law and order seem to always clash. The bone of contention is that people should have the liberty to live life as they want without worrying about the government snooping on them.
The principle of stability and order however, calls for surveillance so that behavior that is not in the best interests of the country can be curbed.
For this reason, these two principles keep clashing in reference to surveillance.