The life of peasants under the Tokugawa Shogunate was they paid high taxes and mainly lived in poverty.
Answer: Option A
<u>Explanation:</u>
The main job of the peasants in the Tokugawa Shogunate was to grow crops and do farming. These peasants barely owned the land on which they could only live or some of them did not even own land and they had to rent it from the land lords and had to work as tenant farmers. They also had to pay rent, sometimes in the form of rice, and all these situations led to them living in poverty.
Staggering senate elections have the benefits of protecting senators and senate from staggering public sentiment
Public sentiment is dynamic and not static. This means it keeps on changing from time to time. To insulate the senate, senators are elected for a term of six years, and every two years, a third of the senators are reelected. this means there is continuity of policies in the house, and senators remain committed to nationalistic agendas.
<span>I remember this from IPC! If farmers used reclaimed water, there is a chance of chemical contamination in the water can damage the plants, if not kill them entirely! :D</span>
The answer is letter c. The Truman Doctrine. The Truman
Doctrine was known as an American foreign policy made to oppose the Soviet geopolitical
development during the Cold War. The Truman Doctrine was announced to the
congress by President Harry Truman, hence the name, which was on March 12, 1947
and developed even further on July 12, 1948, when President Truman promised to
oppose the Soviet threats to Greece and Turkey.