The main ideas shaping US imperialism were "Manifest destiny" and the "White man's burden". Manifest destiny refers to the 19th century belief that the United States were meant to expand across North America because of the particular excellence of its (white) people and (democratic) institutions. This lead to the Trail of Tears, among other atrocities. Once the US reached the Pacific Ocean, new lands came into view (Puerto Rico, the Phillipines). Manifest destiny became entwined with the idea that "civilized" nations had a moral obligation to colonize other peoples, which Rudyard Kipling summed up in his poem "White Man's Burden". The tensions in this "benevolent imperialism" were never fully resolved; the US invasion of Irak was launched under similar pretenses (the invasion was "for the good" of those invaded). The idea that other peoples have a right to self determination regardless of their level of development has not yet become accepted by the great powers, including the US.
Edible, digestible and palatable
Answer:
Brian is stranded in the wilderness with nowhere to go and no hope of being rescued soon. He recalls building a shelter in a park with his friend, and sets to work making that.
Answer: here
Explanation:
“The Pomegranate Seeds” by Nathaniel Hawthorne tells the story of Demeter, also known as Ceres, her daughter Persephone, also known as Proserpina and Pluto, or Hades, the god of the underworld. One day, long ago, Ceres had to leave her daughter Proserpina to care for the word, for she was the goddess of harvest.