Answer:
1.) Joy because I'm alive so I feel happy (You can say something like that)
2.) There made by whatever memories are made. There memories balls so they are made from memories. (You can say: My favorite memory is when i went to the park for my very first time)
3.) When sadness touch a memories she made it turn very sad, hence the name sadness. I would yes it is possible to a certain point. Our memories can change say for instance, I go to the park and I had a great time. But your mom 2 days later says that you bumped your head on the slide and you had to go to the hospital, but you didn't remember all of that. you just remembered having fun. That can change your memory from making it happy from sad. But that is just an example.
4.) Parents can say the smallest things and it can trigger a kids mind. I dont know how to feel about that though. But, I know that putting on that happy but your really sad is not a good thing. If she or he is really sad dont front and make it seem like your happy.
Answer:
D: Hitler has influenced the youth of Germany to embrace anti-Semitism, militarism, and extreme nationalism at the expense of their education.
Took on quiz
Explanation:
Best answer: Union troops had a greater reason to fight the Confederates.
Historical context/details:
President Abraham Lincoln issued The Emancipation Proclamation as an executive order on January 1, 1863. The executive order declared freedom for slaves in ten Confederate states in rebellion against the Union. It also allowed that freed slaves could join the Union Army to fight for the cause of reuniting the nation and ending slavery. As summarized by the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, "The Proclamation broadened the goals of the Union war effort; it made the eradication of slavery into an explicit Union goal, in addition to the reuniting of the country."
While Lincoln personally was strongly against slavery, he had to tread carefully in his role as president and commander-in-chief. The Emancipation Proclamation was carefully worded in order to retain the support of four border slave states, which remained in the Union though they were states that permitted slavery, were Maryland, Missouri, Delaware, and Kentucky. Lincoln wanted to keep those states loyal to the Union cause.
The Emancipation Proclamation was also a way of blocking foreign support for the Confederate cause. According to the American Battlefield Trust, "Britain and France had considered supporting the Confederacy in order to expand their influence in the Western Hemisphere. However, many Europeans were against slavery." Britain had abolished slavery in its territories in 1833. France had put a final end to slavery in its territories in 1848. So when Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, it also served as a foreign policy action to keep European powers out of the US Civil War, according to Steve Jones, professor of history at Southwestern Adventist University.
I would say that good judgement comes from considering the outcomes of your decisions.
This is not something that is a "talent": something that one is born with, or something that can be done without thinking too hard. Instead, one actually has to consider the outcomes of the decisions to be able to evaluate them.