The Petition of Right of 1628 contained four main points:
-No taxes could be levied without Parliament's consent
-No English subject could be imprisoned without cause - thus reinforcing the right of habeas corpus
-No quartering of soldiers in citizens homes
-No martial law may be used in peacetime
Answer:
Correct answer is It shifted US Policy towards imperialism.
Explanation:
Second option is the only correct as it marked the expansion of United States. United States decided to spread their influence outside American continent, which put them in the line of great imperial forces.
All other answers are therefore wrong, as they are not expressing the attitudes of the American government at the time.
Answer:
government makes all production decisions-C
government controls wages-C
government owns all natural and capital resources--C
government owns some, but not all, heavy industries-S
supply and demand helps to control prices-S
Explanation:
In a communist country Wages, Businesses, and Natural resources are all property of the government. For example in the Soviet Union you arent allowed to be richer then others unless your a member of the Communist party of the Soviet Union. Also wages were also controlled by the USSR Government in the times from 1922 to 1991
Answer:
Explanation:
Soviet Union built the Berlin Wall
Embracing an area more than half a million square miles, the kingdom of Mali was undoubtedly one of the richest and most prosperous on earth in the 14th century. Its territory touched the Atlantic Ocean to the west and extended as far as the bend in the Niger River to the east. From north to south, it embraced the entire swath of land south of the Sahara to the thick tropical forests of equatorial Africa. The kingdom was richly endowed with gold, salt, cola nuts, and ivory, which were in great demand in the markets of the Mediterranean. But above all, it was endowed with gifted and far-sighted rulers like Mansa Musa.
From our perspective, the important element in Mali was that it was Muslim. This fact made it an integral part of the vast Islamic world. Trade and ideas flowed freely between Mali, North Africa, Spain, Egypt and Arabia. Muslim traders plied the desert with their caravans carrying brass work from Spain, brocades from Egypt, precious stones from India and returned with gold, salt, cola nuts, and ivory. More important was the flow of ideas and scholars. Africans traveled to Mecca for Hajj and brought back books written in Baghdad, Cairo, and Kairouan. Islamic jurists and ulema were in great demand in the learning centers of Sijilmasa, Timbuktu, Mali, and Ghana. African soldiers were very much a part of Muslim armies in Spain, Egypt, and India. Mali was thus a part of the Islamic mosaic contributing its wealth and its resources to the prosperity of Asia and Europe alike.