When the Alien and Sedition Acts were
passed in 1798 because the U.S. was upset
with France, what did it allow the US
president to do to non-citizens?
A. imprison them
B. deport them
C. execute them​

Answers

Answer 1

Answer:

B. Deport them

Explanation:

Fearing an imminent war with France, the Adams administration quickly passed these acts to prevent the invasion of spies.  The acts also restricted many basic rights, including free speech, which is why they are so controversial.

Answer 2

Answer: They would Deport them back

Explanation:


Related Questions

Which one was worse, Corona virus or the 1918 Flue?

Answers

Answer: I believe the Corona virous

Explanation: stay safe and keep your self protected :)

You have to look at time, how long it has been, etc. The Spanish Flu went on from 1918-1919 and there were 50 million dead, and now there is just over half a million dead for 6 months of pandemic. If we multiply this by 4, the span of 2 years, the number of deaths would be 2 million. Statistically, the Spanish Flu was worse, but we won’t know until this pandemic is over.

Akhenaten was not liked by the people of Egypt during his reign as pharaoh because he forced them to change their religion from polytheistic to monotheistic. Describe the changes that he tried to make. Based on what you know about Egyptian religion, why do you think this would have been such a large change?

Answers

Answer: Akhenaten (pronounced /ˌækəˈnɑːtən/),[8] also spelled Echnaton,[9] Akhenaton,[3] Ikhnaton,[2] and Khuenaten[10][11] (Ancient Egyptian: ꜣḫ-n-jtn, meaning "Effective for the Aten"), was an ancient Egyptian pharaoh reigning c. 1353–1336[3] or 1351–1334 BC,[4] the tenth ruler of the Eighteenth Dynasty. Before the fifth year of his reign, he was known as Amenhotep IV (Ancient Egyptian: jmn-ḥtp, meaning "Amun is satisfied", Hellenized as Amenophis IV).

Akhenaten

Amenhotep IV

Amenophis IV, Naphurureya, Ikhnaton[1][2]

Statue of Akhenaten in the early Amarna style

Statue of Akhenaten in the early Amarna style

Pharaoh

Reign

1353–1336 BC[3]

1351–1334 BC[4]

(18th Dynasty of Egypt)

Predecessor

Amenhotep III

Successor

Smenkhkare

Royal titulary

Consort

Nefertiti

Kiya

An unidentified sister-wife (most likely)

Tadukhipa

Children

Smenkhkare?

Meritaten

Meketaten

Ankhesenamun

Neferneferuaten Tasherit

Neferneferure

Setepenre

Tutankhamun (most likely)

Ankhesenpaaten Tasherit?

Meritaten Tasherit?

Father

Amenhotep III

Mother

Tiye

Died

1336 or 1334 BC

Burial

Royal Tomb of Akhenaten, Amarna (original tomb)

KV55 (disputed)

[6][7]

Monuments

Akhetaten, Gempaaten

Religion

Ancient Egyptian religion

Atenism

Akhenaten is noted for abandoning Egypt's traditional polytheistic religion and introducing Atenism, worship centered on Aten. The views of Egyptologists differ whether Atenism should be considered as absolute monotheism, or whether it was monolatry, syncretism, or henotheism.[12][13] This culture shift away from traditional religion was not widely accepted. After his death, Akhenaten's monuments were dismantled and hidden, his statues were destroyed, and his name excluded from lists of rulers compiled by later pharaohs.[14] Traditional religious practice was gradually restored, notably under his close successor Tutankhamun, who changed his name from Tutankhaten early in his reign.[15] When some dozen years later rulers without clear rights of succession from the Eighteenth Dynasty founded a new dynasty, they discredited Akhenaten and his immediate successors, referring to Akhenaten himself as "the enemy" or "that criminal" in archival records.[16][17]

Akhenaten was all but lost to history until the late 19th century discovery of Amarna, or Akhetaten, the new capital city he built for the worship of Aten.[18] Furthermore, in 1907, a mummy that could be Akhenaten's was unearthed from the tomb KV55 in the Valley of the Kings by Edward R. Ayrton. Genetic testing has determined that the man buried in KV55 was Tutankhamun's father,[19] but its identification as Akhenaten has since been questioned.[6][7][20][21][22]

Akhenaten's rediscovery and Flinders Petrie's early excavations at Amarna sparked great public interest in the pharaoh and his queen Nefertiti. He has been described as "enigmatic", "mysterious", "revolutionary", "the greatest idealist of the world", and "the first individual in history", but also as a "heretic", "fanatic", "possibly insane", and "mad".[12][23][24][25][26] The interest comes from his connection with Tutankhamun, the unique style and high quality of the pictorial arts he patronized, and ongoing interest in the religion he attempted to establish.

Explanation: i'm already in high school so i might have passed history but i had dementia in middle school

Which statements were a factor in the decline of Sumer?

Select Two correct answers.




Nomads invaded Sumerian city-states.

Salinization of the soil occurred.


The cultivated soil had poor drainage.


A drought caused poor crop production.

Answers

nomads invaded sumerian city states
A drought caused poor crop production and salinization of the soil occurred.

Do you agree with John Adam's actions in appointing hundreds of Federalist judges at the end of his presidency? Explain your answer.

Answers

Answer:

MIDNIGHT JUDGES refers to the judicial appointments made by President John Adams just before he was succeeded by President Thomas Jefferson. Adams saw the appointments as a way to preserve Federalist influence in the federal government during the Jeffersonian tenure. I agree

Explanation:

Explain in three or more complete sentences why the United States is considered a "Mixed Economy".

Answers

Answer: The Answer is in the explanation

Explanation:

The United States is considered a mixed economy because it is a combination of both capitalism and socialism. The government controls some aspects of the economy, but businesses are also allowed to operate with some degree of freedom. This system allows for both public and private ownership of resources and businesses, providing a balance between individual freedom and social support.

Answer: Read the bottom

Explanation:

For example, the United States is a mixed economy, as it leaves ownership of the means of production in mostly private hands but incorporates elements such as subsidies for agriculture, regulation on manufacturing, and partial or full public ownership of some industries like letter delivery and national defense.

What power does home rule give local government?

Local governments can enforce state laws without using state law enforcement.
Local governments can create new laws without state government approval.
Local governments can pass laws that contradict state laws.
Local governments can pass laws that contradict federal laws.

Answers

Local governments can create new laws without state government approved

Make a paragraph of atleast 5 sentences. How did the aryans and indians justify the use of the caste system? Include evidence from the background information and the vedas

Answers

Answer: The caste system in India is the paradigmatic ethnographic example of the classification of castes. It has its origins in ancient India and was transformed by various ruling elites in medieval, early-modern, and modern India, especially the Mughal Empire and the British Raj. It is today the basis of affirmative action programs in India as enforced through its constitution. The caste system consists of two different concepts, varna and jati, which may be regarded as different levels of analysis of this system.

The caste system as it exists today is thought to be the result of developments during the collapse of the Mughal era and the rise of the British colonial government in India. The collapse of the Mughal era saw the rise of powerful men who associated themselves with kings, priests, and ascetics, affirming the regal and martial form of the caste ideal and reshaping many casteless social groups into differentiated caste communities. The British Raj furthered this development, making rigid caste organization a central mechanism of administration. Between 1860 and 1920, the British incorporated the Indian caste system into their system of governance, granting administrative jobs and senior appointments only to Christians and people belonging to certain castes. Social unrest during the 1920s led to a change in this policy. From then on, the colonial administration began a policy of positive discrimination by reserving a certain percentage of government jobs for the lower castes. In 1948, negative discrimination based on caste was banned by law and further enshrined in the Indian constitution in 1950; however, the system continues to be practiced in parts of India. There are 3,000 castes and 25,000 sub-castes in India, each related to a specific occupation.

Caste-based differences have also been practiced in other regions and religions in the Indian subcontinent, like Nepalese Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and Sikhism. It has been challenged by many reformist Hindu movements, Sikhism, Christianity, present-day Indian Buddhism. With Indian influences, the caste system is also practiced in Bali and parts of Southeast Asia such as Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand.

India after achieving independence in 1947 enacted many affirmative action policies for the upliftment of historically marginalized groups as enforced through its constitution. These policies included reserving a quota of places for these groups in higher education and government employment.

ncreased immigration from foreign countries, a dramatic rise in birth rate, and a long period of peace all contribute to ___________.
A.
increased pestilence
B.
decreased pestilence
C.
increased population
D.
decreased population

Answers

y he correct answer is b

Answer:

increased population.

Explanation:

More people (immigrators) are getting pregnant which means the population will increase.

How did Socrates teach people his ideas?
A. He taught by writing books for lower classes to read.
B. He taught by asking questions.
C. He taught by welcoming students to his Academy.
D. He taught by lecturing the polis.​

Answers

The answer is b as he asked question after clarifying question until his students arrived at their own understanding
The answer is B He taught by asking questions

George Childress was a lawyer and statesman whose primary contribution to Texas was —

Answers

Answer: He was the primary author of the Texas Declaration of Independence. (Sorry if this wasn't the same person I only know this much about him :'] )

Principal author of the Texas Declaration of Independence

Islamic Contributions
4. Math
5. Science
6. Medicine
7. Literature
8. Art and Architecture


Describing Complete each sentence.

9. Muslim astronomers measured Earth and realized _______________.

10. Ibn Khaldun, a Muslim historian, was one of the first to study _____________ .

11. Muslim scholars in Spain saved ancient Greek writings by ____________.

Answers

9. Muslim astronomers measured Earth and realized it is spherical.

10. Ibn Khaldun, a Muslim historian, was one of the first to study history using a scientific method.

11. Muslim scholars in Spain saved ancient Greek writings by translating them into Arabic.

Answer:

Muslim astronomers measured Earth and realized it was spherical.

Ibn Khaldun, a Muslim historian, was one of the first to study the rise and fall of civilizations.

Muslim scholars in Spain saved ancient Greek writings by translating them into Arabic and preserving them in libraries.

Here are some additional details about each contribution:

Muslim astronomers were able to measure the circumference of the Earth to within a few hundred miles. They also developed the astrolabe, a device used to measure the positions of stars and planets.

Ibn Khaldun was a 14th-century historian who is considered one of the founders of sociology. He wrote a book called the Muqaddimah, which is a study of the rise and fall of civilizations.

Muslim scholars in Spain translated many ancient Greek texts into Arabic. These translations were later translated into Latin, which helped to preserve them and make them available to scholars in Europe.

Explanation:

What was the Continental Congress?

A) Group of delegates representing the people of the American colonies

B) Group of soldiers from Canada sent to calm the riots

C) Meeting in America of British and French politicians and merchants

D)Meeting of delegates from Spain, France, and Britain

Answers

The answer would be a

Why are the Herculaneum ruins a part of history like Pompeii?

Answers

Answer: Pompeii is the ideal place to visit to understand how a city of the Roman Empire looked like, whereas Herculaneum is able to show us how people truly lived

Explanation:

Like the nearby city of Pompeii, Herculaneum is famous as one of the few ancient cities to be preserved nearly intact, as the ash that blanketed the town protected it against looting and the elements.

(NO LINK ANSWERS) {100 points to revise this 5 paragraph essay and brainiest to person who meats standards.}
The colonization of Indians by non-Indian society exemplified just how lines got drawn on the land in the Pacific Northwest. It was not a clear-cut or precise process, and it was not a process that was seen the same way by all the parties involved. Policy toward Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest was an extension of the Indian policy developed at the national level by the U.S. government. In other words, the rules and regulations for dealing with Indians were established and administered by various federal officials based in Washington, D.C.—by superintendents of Indian affairs and Army officers, by Senators and Congressmen, by members of presidential administrations and Supreme Court justices. Yet western settlers—the residents of states, territories, and localities—attempted with some success to modify national Indian policy to suit their own ends. Moreover, the natives who were the objects of these policies also attempted to modify and resist them, again with a limited degree of success.

Joseph Lane

To explain the development of relations between Indians and non-Indians in the Pacific Northwest, then, one needs to keep in mind that there were federal points of view, settler points of view, and native points of view. The plural—"points of view"—is deliberate. It is also crucial to keep in mind that there was no unified perspective among any of the parties involved. Neither the officials of federal government, nor the settlers of the Northwest, nor the Indians of the region were unanimous in their thinking about and responses to American Indian policy as it was applied in the Pacific Northwest. (Indians from the same band or tribe sometimes ended up fighting one another; some women proved more sympathetic to Indians than men did; the U.S. Army was often much more restrained in dealing with natives than settler militias were.) This lack of agreement was surely one of the things that complicated, and to some extent worsened, relations between Indians and non-Indians. It makes generalizations about those relations tenuous.

Joseph Lane (right). (Reproduced in Johansen and Gates, Empire of the Columbia, New York, 1957. Photo courtesy of Special Collections, University of Oregon Library.) Portrait of Isaac I. Stevens (below). The federal Office of Indian Affairs assigned to Stevens the task of carrying out the new reservation policy in Washington Territory. (Special Collections, University of Washington, Portrait files.)

Isaac Stevens

Although it is risky, then, I want to offer the generalization that 19th-century America was an achieving, acquisitive, non-pluralistic, and ethnocentric society. It had tremendous confidence in its way of life, and particularly its political and economic systems, and it aspired to disseminate its ways to those who seemed in need of them or able to benefit from them—including Indians (and Mexicans and, at times, Canadians). The nation was tremendously expansive, in terms of both territory and economy. Its assorted political and economic blessings (at least for free, white, adult males) seemed both to justify and feed this expansionism. Thus expansion was viewed as both self-serving (it added to the material wealth of the country) and altruistic (it spread American democracy and capitalism to those without them). The nation's self-interest was thus perceived to coincide with its sense of mission and idealism.

American Indian policy bespoke this mixture of idealism and self-interest. White Americans proposed to dispossess natives and transform their cultures, and the vast majority of them remained confident throughout the century that these changes would be best for all concerned. Anglo-American society would take from Indians the land and other natural resources that would permit it to thrive, while Indians would in theory absorb the superior ways of white culture, including Christianity, capitalism, and republican government. For the first half of the 19th century, federal officials pursued this exchange largely with an Indian policy dominated by the idea of removal. Removal policy aimed to relocate tribes from east of the Mississippi River on lands to the west, assuming that over time the natives would be acculturated to white ways. There were numerous problems with this policy, of course. For our purposes, one of the key problems was that removal policy regarded lands west of the Mississippi as "permanent Indian country." By the 1840s, numerous non-Indians were moving both on to and across those lands, ending any chance that they would truly remain "Indian country." By midcentury the Office of Indian Affairs had begun devising another policy based on the idea of reservations. This institution, new at the federal level, has had a central role in relations between Northwest Indians and non-Indians since 1850.

Answers

Answer:

I fell it was good is it yours?

i like how you cover all the topics and how you really explain everything

it kind of looks like it was copy and pasted though

but if its yours than thats a compliment.

brainliest plzzzz

Explanation:

Answer:

Explanation:

The colonization of Indians by non-Indian society exemplified just how lines got drawn on the land in the Pacific Northwest. It was not a clear-cut or precise process, and it was not a process that was seen the same way by all the parties involved. Policy toward Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest was an extension of the Indian policy developed at the national level by the U.S. government. In other words, the rules and regulations for dealing with Indians were established and administered by various federal officials based in Washington, D.C.—by superintendents of Indian affairs and Army officers, by Senators and Congressmen, by members of presidential administrations and Supreme Court justices. Yet western settlers—the residents of states, territories, and localities—attempted with some success to modify national Indian policy to suit their own ends. Moreover, the natives who were the objects of these policies also attempted to modify and resist them, again with a limited degree of success.

Joseph Lane

To explain the development of relations between Indians and non-Indians in the Pacific Northwest, then, one needs to keep in mind that there were federal points of view, settler points of view, and native points of view. The plural—"points of view"—is deliberate. It is also crucial to keep in mind that there was no unified perspective among any of the parties involved. Neither the officials of federal government, nor the settlers of the Northwest, nor the Indians of the region were unanimous in their thinking about and responses to American Indian policy as it was applied in the Pacific Northwest. (Indians from the same band or tribe sometimes ended up fighting one another; some women proved more sympathetic to Indians than men did; the U.S. Army was often much more restrained in dealing with natives than settler militias were.) This lack of agreement was surely one of the things that complicated, and to some extent worsened, relations between Indians and non-Indians. It makes generalizations about those relations tenuous.

Joseph Lane (right). (Reproduced in Johansen and Gates, Empire of the Columbia, New York, 1957. Photo courtesy of Special Collections, University of Oregon Library.) Portrait of Isaac I. Stevens (below). The federal Office of Indian Affairs assigned to Stevens the task of carrying out the new reservation policy in Washington Territory. (Special Collections, University of Washington, Portrait files.)

Isaac Stevens

Although it is risky, then, I want to offer the generalization that 19th-century America was an achieving, acquisitive, non-pluralistic, and ethnocentric society. It had tremendous confidence in its way of life, and particularly its political and economic systems, and it aspired to disseminate its ways to those who seemed in need of them or able to benefit from them—including Indians (and Mexicans and, at times, Canadians). The nation was tremendously expansive, in terms of both territory and economy. Its assorted political and economic blessings (at least for free, white, adult males) seemed both to justify and feed this expansionism. Thus expansion was viewed as both self-serving (it added to the material wealth of the country) and altruistic (it spread American democracy and capitalism to those without them). The nation's self-interest was thus perceived to coincide with its sense of mission and idealism.

American Indian policy bespoke this mixture of idealism and self-interest. White Americans proposed to dispossess natives and transform their cultures, and the vast majority of them remained confident throughout the century that these changes would be best for all concerned. Anglo-American society would take from Indians the land and other natural resources that would permit it to thrive, while Indians would in theory absorb the superior ways of white culture, including Christianity, capitalism, and republican government. For the first half of the 19th century, federal officials pursued this exchange largely with an Indian policy dominated by the idea of removal. Removal policy aimed to relocate tribes from east of the Mississippi River on lands to the west, assuming that over time the natives would be acculturated to white ways. There were numerous problems with this policy, of course. For our purposes, one of the key problems was that removal policy regarded lands west of the Mississippi as "permanent Indian country." By the 1840s, numerous non-Indians were moving both on to and across those lands, ending any chance that they would truly remain "Indian country." By midcentury the Office of Indian Affairs had begun devising another policy based on the idea of reservations. This institution, new at the federal level, has had a central role in relations between Northwest Indians and non-Indians since 1850.

Which event triggered World War II? plz help i need this fast


Germany's invasion of Poland


Germany's annexation of Austria


Germany's occupation of the Sudetenland


Germany's invasion of France

Answers

Answer:

the September 1 1939 invasion of poland then on September 3 1939 britan france declared war on germany

Answer- Germans invasion of Poland

What was Captain Cook's role in the First Fleet?

Answers

Answer:

Myth 2 – Cook and Endeavour were in the First Fleet and brought convicts to Australia. ... In fact, Cook was the representative of the British Crown and claimed possession of the east coast of Australia on behalf of the Crown, naming it New South Wales

Explanation:

Myth 1 – Cook was the first European to discover Australia
According to a recent survey 31 per cent of Australians think that James Cook was the first European to find Australia.1

The fact is that Cook’s 1770 voyage followed more than a dozen previous encounters by Europeans in the north-west, west and south of the continent throughout the 17th century – all of them more than a hundred years before Cook’s visit. There may even have been earlier Portuguese visits in the 16th century, and some historians have suggested that the Chinese Grand Fleet, under Admiral Zheng He, may have arrived here in the 15th century. Visiting long before Cook, men such as Willem Janszoon, Luis Vaz de Torres, Dirk Hartog, Frederick de Houtman and Abel Tasman are certainly not household names, as are Cook and Endeavour.

Cook can claim a couple of other ‘firsts’, though: in 1770, he was the first European to chart the east coast and the Endeavour crew were the first Europeans known to have landed on the east coast.

In fact, the oldest known foreign visitors to Australia were from modern-day Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. Makassan traders had been visiting and trading with people in northern Australia for hundreds of years and dugout canoes were traded from the Sepik River to the Torres Strait Islands for generations before Cook arrived there.

No European ‘discovered’ Australia. The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander inhabitants of this continent managed that all by themselves – some 60,000 years before any European turned up.

Painting of James Cook
Captain Cook by Nathaniel Dance (1735-1811), published 1969. State Library of Victoria, H32508

Myth 2 – Cook and Endeavour were in the First Fleet and brought convicts to Australia
According to the same survey, 47 per cent of Australians think that Endeavour arrived in Australia with the First Fleet in 1788 – and they are 100 per cent wrong!2

The First Fleet, under Captain Arthur Phillip, arrived in Botany Bay between 18 and 20 January 1788. By that time, Cook had been dead for nine years, Endeavour had been renamed Lord Sandwich, and in 1778, during the American War of Independence, the ship had been scuttled in Newport Harbor, Rhode Island, as an underwater defence against French attack.

The way many non-Indigenous Australians mix up Cook and Phillip is understandable – for many years Cook’s arrival was seen as a better foundational moment than a fleet full of convicts, and so 29 April (the date when Endeavour arrived at Botany Bay in 1770) was officially celebrated as the origin of white settlement. From the 1930s, the focus of national commemorations turned towards the First Fleet – but often didn’t mention the convicts. It wasn’t until the ‘convict stain’ began to be erased in the 1970s that the First Fleet became widely associated with the beginning of modern Australia.

In fact, Cook was the representative of the British Crown and claimed possession of the east coast of Australia on behalf of the Crown, naming it New South Wales. Cook’s arrival has therefore become the symbol of the European invasion and occupation of the continent, particularly for First Nations people.

Myth 3 – January 26 marks Cook’s arrival
Another fallacy. On 29 April 1770, Cook arrived in Stingray Bay (which he later changed to Botanist Bay, then Botany Bay – the area is now the Kamay Botany Bay National Park). January 26 was when the First Fleet arrived in Sydney Cove – 18 years later, in 1788. Governor Phillip moved the planned settlement from Botany Bay to Port Jackson (Sydney Harbour). Strangely, perhaps, the usually meticulous cartographer Cook didn’t even enter what Phillip called ‘the finest harbour in the world’, but merely sailed past.

Myth 4 – Cook circumnavigated Australia
That’s a ‘no’. Cook saw only the east coast of the continent, and was several thousand kilometres short of a circumnavigation.

Cook sighted the mainland near what is now called Point Hicks, in Victoria, and sailed north up the east coast before continuing to Batavia (now Jakarta, Indonesia). He didn’t ever see the north and west coasts of the continent, and the only southern region he encountered was on a later trip, when he sailed Tasmania’s east coast.

The first European to circumnavigate Australia was Matthew Flinders, from 1801 to 1803. Flinders was accompanied by Bungaree, the first Indigenous Australian known to have circumnavigated the continent.


How did Americans work to define their ideal political structure?

Answers

Answer: The AMERICAN DREAM. It's the belief that each American has the freedom to pursue a better life — a nice house, a car or two, and a more comfortable existence than our parents. This freedom has fueled incredible "RAGS TO RICHES" stories, such as Presidents starting out in log cabins and highly successful entrepreneurs who came to America as penniless immigrants — not to mention the guy that dropped out of Harvard to become the richest man in the world. These stories contribute to the American political culture.

Explanation:

i aint never seen two pretty best friends it’s always one of them gotta be ugly

What happens when the president makes a treaty with another nation?

The treaty must be approved by 51 percent of the US population.
The treaty must be approved by a two-thirds vote of Congress.
The treaty is sent to government agencies for approval.
The treaty goes into effect once it is signed by the president.

Answers

Answer:

D.

Explanation:

im learning this rn

The answer is the treaty goes into effect once it is signed by the president

Write an argumentative essay justifying whether schools should include breakfast as part of a daily schedule. write 6paragraps or more

Answers

Answer:

Why is breakfast the most important meal of the day?

Breakfast means ‘break the fast’, as the previous meal is typically 8–10 hours before waking up in the morning. Breakfast is important in re-fuelling the body with energy and nutrients, kick-starting the day. If breakfast is skipped, the result can be feeling lethargic and tired and lead to difficulty concentrating and behaviour difficulties in the school environment.

Why is breakfast important for children?

Breakfast provides children with energy and essential nutrients, including iron, calcium and vitamins B and C, which are necessary for growth, development and good health. Children who eat breakfast each day are much more likely to meet their daily nutritional requirements, as a good quality breakfast can provide a child with up to a third of their daily nutrient needs. Children who don’t eat breakfast may not make up for the nutrients not consumed within the rest of the day’s intake. Eating breakfast can also reduce the risk of overweight and/or obesity, as breakfast is often replaced by mid-morning snacks that tend to be high in fat, sugar and salt. Skipping breakfast can also lead to over eating throughout the rest of the day, increasing the risk of becoming overweight or obese.

How can breakfast affect children while at school?

Children who have eaten breakfast can concentrate better and have a longer attention span, helping them to learn and study better. They can also perform better physically after eating breakfast as there is more energy available to their muscles. Breakfast can improve behaviour and mood, as children have better concentration and aren’t tired or hungry.

Explanation:

yes , school should include breakfast daily. there are many reaons to why i think this . for one ,breakfast is a important meal of the day . and not everyone gets to eat at home ,so for them to provide breakfast at school is great!

there are homlesss kids out there who can’t eat food where they stay ,so they be hungry! and kids like that would love to be able to at least eat one meal a day . schools should also make breakfast free ,in i’m opinion.

there are many reason why i think this . not everyone is able to afford food at school ,so kids don’t be able to eat food like some other kids . and you never know what a person is going through so it’s good to just let’s them get it free .

even if they can’t get it free ,they should have a “do not want “ basket for the people who bought food ans did not eat it . that would help a lot of kids ! also,they should allow kids to eat throughout the day.

another reson to why they should allow breakfast through the day at school is because some people just like the food. and not everyone wants to wake up early to make some food at home ,so they go to school to eat . and , for the kids who actually got the money for food ,would maybe wanna buy them some breakfast

so yah,those are all my reasons to why i think that schools should allow breakfast daily at school. and i hope this proved a point to many others out there who thinks differently from me !


(please gimme brainy..this took a while )

Use the drop-down menus to answer these questions relating to the push/pull factors in the Great Migration.

Wages were
in the North.

The Jim Crow laws
African American people in the South.

The Ku Klux Klan became more
in the South.

Voting rights for African Americans were
in the North.

Answers

Answer:

Wages were  

✔ higher

in the North.

The Jim Crow laws  

✔ oppressed

African American people in the South.

The Ku Klux Klan became more  

✔ brutal

in the South.

Voting rights for African Americans were  

✔ practiced

in the North.

Explanation:

Answer:

Wages were  

✔ higher

in the North.

The Jim Crow laws  

✔ oppressed

African American people in the South.

The Ku Klux Klan became more  

✔ brutal

in the South.

Voting rights for African Americans were  

✔ practiced

in the North.

Chapter 2 of Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: American Slave. After the discussion, you will reflect on the experience. Write two to three paragraphs that answer the following questions:

Do you feel you understand the text at a deeper level? How?
What is clear to you now about the text that was not before the discussion?
How was the process? Did your group adhere to the rules of discussion?
How do you feel about your own participation?
What was one thing you noticed about the experience?

Answers

Answer:

Douglass states that Mr Covey gave him "very severe whipping, cutting my back..." This line is great evidence that supports the mean idea as it shows how slaves are treated worse than animals even. The rest of the passage provides various scenarios, all leading up to the main idea. Douglass states that he has "marks visible for a long time after." This further brings up the inexcusable actions that were done to the slaves. Animals may be treated badly from time to time but the slaves were constantly victims to lashings of anger.

Paragraph 2:

(I don't have the actual passage so i can't give evidence sorry, just put some quotes in alongside it)

The hypocrisy came from the people who slaved to the slaves. Religiously, not many people agreed on it , however, it still thrived due to the different variations in the religious beliefs. People that appeared 'religious' and that were wealthy could do anything with the slaves and no one would object because after all they were religious.

Explanation:

Why did the United States and Russia not remain allies after World War II? (Cold War)

A. They had different political beliefs.
B. They fought against each other.
C. They did not want the other country to be a superpower.
D.They each wanted the most nuclear weapons.

Answers

Answer:

i think b

Explanation:

I believe that the answer is b

In your area, does the map show overlap between territories and list more than one name? Toggle on the "Languages" switch, then toggle off the "Territories" switch. Describe the differences you see between the view of territories and the view of languages. HELP ME PLS ILL GIVE BRAINLIEST!

Answers

Answer:

5

Explanation:

5

Which career is least likely to be impacted by poor economic conditions?

Question 6 options:

a)

Salesperson


b)

Restaurant Manager


c)

Construction Worker


d)

Nurse

Answers

C construction worker
D. Nurse, Because in my quiz that was the right one!

Please help!

Select all the ways that countries used to control other countries.
Protectorates
Colonies
Genocide
Sphere of Influence
Communism
Monarchy

Please help! Select all the ways that countries used to control other countries. ProtectoratesColoniesGenocideSphere

Answers

Answer:

Settlement colony, dependent colony, protectorate, and sphere of influence.

Explanation:

Protectorates, genocide, communism and monarchy

will give brainliest plz help its due today You should now be familiar with the Gupta Empire! Your job is to create a photo story that describes the major contributions and achievements of the Gupta Empire. This photo story must show carefully chosen images from four categories:

Category 1: Medicine

Category 2: Mathematics

Category 3: Technology

Category 4: Religion

You must also explain why each photo shows a contribution or achievement that relates to the specific category you placed it in. Your explanation should describe how the contribution or achievement impacted the Gupta Empire. Take a look at the example below.

Your photo story must:

include one opening slide with a title for the presentation and the time period of the Gupta Empire
include one carefully chosen image for each category
explain how each image represents a contribution or achievement of the Gupta Empire within a specific category and how it impacted the Gupta Empire
each explanation must be at least three sentences
identify the time period each contribution is from
BAD ANSWER WILL BE REPORTED!!

Answers

Answer:

Hope this helps :)) i put this in my assignment

Math

Indian numbering is the first numbering system with base ten positional notation. It is believed that Aryabhata was the first mathematician to use the concept of zero.

The astronomers of this period postulated heliocentric theory and studied eclipses, both solar and lunar, explaining them as shadows cast on Earth.

Medicine

The famous Susruta is a Sanskrit text with the main concepts of Ayurvedic medicine (Ayurveda is the name of traditional Indian medicine. It has as a common goal the unification of body-mind and spirit, proclaiming that disease and health are the result of the confluence of three main aspects of existence or doshas) and innovative chapters on surgery. Doctors invented several medical instruments that allowed expanding the number of operations.

Religion

In the religious aspect the Hindu ideas correspond to a large extent to this period, perhaps it is in the time of the Gupta, thanks to the Buddhist influence, that Hinduism came to tolerate the most diverse, and even antagonistic, opinions within its belief system . The elements inherent to Hinduism, which distinguish it from other beliefs, are the caste regime (varna) as a social order and certain rites to which, according to its class, all members of each caste are inseparably linked.

Technology

Guptas' scientists discovered that there were seven planets in the solar system. They also created the technology that was able to help them detect eclipses of the sun and moon. Arybhata was one of the most famous scientists in the Gupta Empire: I determined that Earth rotates on an axis and revolves around the sun.

Explanation:

How to patterns of work and economic activity in New Mexico support the U.S. economy and vice versa?

Which is NOT an example of trade?


Our (New Mexico's) free enterprise system directly impacts decisions at all of the following levels of government except:

What does tourism in New Mexico do for the state economy?

Which resource does New Mexico NOT have enough of to meet our needs?

Answers

Answer:

"How do patterns of work and economic activity in New Mexico support the U.S. economy and vice versa? Which is NOT an example of trade?"

The patterns of work and economic activity in New Mexico support the U.S. economy in several ways. For example, New Mexico is a major producer of oil and gas, which are important sources of energy for the U.S. economy as a whole.

Additionally, New Mexico has a significant tourism industry, with many visitors coming to the state to explore its natural beauty and cultural attractions. This generates revenue and creates jobs not just in New Mexico, but also in the broader U.S. economy.

On the other hand, the U.S. economy supports New Mexico's economic activity through factors such as federal funding and access to national markets. For example, the federal government is a major employer in New Mexico, with many jobs tied to military bases, national parks, and other federal facilities.

Trade is also an important component of the economic relationship between New Mexico and the rest of the U.S. For example, New Mexico exports goods such as electrical machinery, aircraft parts, and processed foods to other states. In turn, New Mexico imports a variety of goods from other states, including petroleum, motor vehicles, and machinery.

However, not all economic activity in New Mexico involves trade. For example, the state also has a significant healthcare industry, with hospitals and medical facilities providing services to local residents. This is an example of an economic activity that does not involve trade.

So, to answer the second part of the question, healthcare is NOT an example of trade.

New Mexico's patterns of work and economic activity support the U.S. economy by contributing to industries such as oil and gas, mining, and agriculture. In turn, the U.S. economy supports New Mexico through trade, providing goods and services to the state.

An example of trade would be importing and exporting goods between countries.

New Mexico's free enterprise system directly impacts decisions at all levels of government.

Tourism in New Mexico brings in revenue and creates jobs, supporting the state economy.

New Mexico does not have enough water to meet its needs.

sort the rights and responsibilities below into the correct categories so that your citizens know exactly what their privileges and duties are! Fill in the last line on each scroll with a right and responsibility that you think is important!
=====================================
Rights

a. __________________________

b. __________________________

c. __________________________

d. __________________________

e. __________________________

Answers

Answer:

a)Support and defend the Constitution

b)Stay informed of the issues affecting your community

c)Participate in the democratic process

d)Respect and obey federal, state, and local laws

e)Respect the rights, beliefs, and opinions of others.

Explanation:

which fl constitution article is most important for the state gov? explain

Answers

Each article of the Florida Constitution serves an essential purpose in the governance of the state. However, Article III is often regarded as the most important for the state government as it outlines the powers and responsibilities of the legislative branch.

Article III establishes the Florida Legislature, which is composed of the House of Representatives and the Senate. It details the procedures for electing legislators, creating and passing laws, and the budgeting process for the state. The legislative branch is responsible for creating and enacting laws that affect Floridians' daily lives, from education and public safety to taxes and infrastructure.

Additionally, Article III specifies the requirements for legislative sessions, committee operations, and the duties of legislative leaders. It also gives the Legislature the authority to investigate state agencies and officials, approve or reject gubernatorial appointments, and override a governor's veto with a two-thirds majority vote.

In summary, Article III is the most important article for the state government as it establishes the legislative branch's powers and responsibilities, which play a critical role in shaping Florida's laws and policies.

Article III of the Florida Constitution is one of the most important articles for the state government. It outlines the powers and responsibilities of the legislative branch of government, which is responsible for making and passing laws in Florida. This article establishes the Florida Legislature, which is composed of the Senate and the House of Representatives, and outlines the qualifications for serving in these positions. It also sets forth the process for passing laws, including the requirements for introducing, debating, and voting on bills. Additionally, Article III establishes the rules for redistricting, which is the process of redrawing the boundaries of legislative districts. This is an important process because it determines the political representation of citizens and can have a significant impact on the outcome of elections. Overall, Article III is critical to the functioning of the state government in Florida, as it establishes the framework for the legislative branch and the process for creating laws.

Which of the following is a type of corruption - (an illegal or dishonest behavior by those in power) that happened in the railroad industry?

Question 2 options:

Railroad owners often lied about their expenses in order to get larger loans.


Railroad owners told people who bought tickets that they might not be able to ride if they needed the spot for luggage or cargo.


Railoroad owners gave land back to those who needed it, if they didn't use all the land for the railway.

Answers

Answer:

the answer is 2

Explanation:

that is what they did for more money

Answer:

answer 2

Explanation:

the same explanation like the person up top

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