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Search results 181 - 190 of 8016 matching essays
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181: Is Saddam Satan?
Is Saddam Satan? At 2:00 A.M. (local time) on August second 1990, Saddam Hussein sent the Iraqi military across the border into Kuwait, and sparked a war whose repercussions are still being felt. Today what eventually became known as the Persian Gulf War, featured the largest air operation in history; and a senseless destruction paralleled only to Danzig or Hiroshima. Even though Saddam was the one who physically invaded Kuwait, is balking at United Nations resolutions, and is generally known as a tyrant. He should not be destroyed . The Gulf War was nothing more than the United States attempting to establish, as former President Bush so aptly termed, the “New Order”. The United States supported Saddam Hussein and the Ba’ath regime prior to the ...
182: Definition Of American Democra
... executed or severely whipped. The "Underground Railroad" was a project that helped black slaves escape into Canada, especially Amherstburg. The system involved 3,000 white helpers and freed an estimated 75,000 people after the civil war. Slavery in the middle of the 1800's was abolished except for the rebellion states in the south. In 1863, the Emancipation Proclamation was issued which made slavery illegal in the states that had rebelled ... inhumane today. But that fact wasn't so clear back in the 19th century. Slavery in American history is usually associated with the 1860's, because that was the decade of southern secession and the Civil War. But the Confederate States of America and the Civil War were really a dramatic climax to all the arguments and disagreements on slavery that had been building up in the preceding decades. The ...
183: Rome
... Before Christ. Julius Caesar returned back to Rome and began his political career as a member of the popular party. In 69 Before C. Julius Caesar helped Pompey to obtain the supreme command for the war in the East. When Julius Caesar returned to Rome from Spain in 68 Before Christ he created one of his greatest contributions to history the Julian calendar. In 60 Before Christ Julius Caesar organized a ... army and got the support of the soldiers against the senate. On Jan. 19, 49 Before Christ, Caesar crossed the Rubicon, the stream holding his province from entering Italy, once he crossed this stream the civil war began. Julius Caesar's march to Rome was a triumphant one filled with happi ness and joy in the Romans part although I cant say that for the Italians. At Pharsala in 48 B. ...
184: Civil War-sectionalism
... their own nation. That was the catastrophe of the North. Lincoln would soon launch a crusade to reunite the United States; and his success or failure would decide the fate of the nation. Mobilization for war was what followed, and after the bloodiest fighting in American history, the North finally succeeded in stopping secession. The difference in culture between the North and South had led the nation to brink of destruction ... their own nation. That was the catastrophe of the North. Lincoln would soon launch a crusade to reunite the United States; and his success or failure would decide the fate of the nation. Mobilization for war was what followed, and after the bloodiest fighting in American history, the North finally succeeded in stopping secession. The difference in culture between the North and South had led the nation to brink of destruction ...
185: The Civil Rights Movement: Some Progress Is Better Then No Progress
The Civil Rights Movement: Some Progress Is Better Then No Progress It is a relentless struggle to attempt to provide equality to all people regardless of race, gender, age, or disability. We are all different and therefore ... person over another person. Therefore the vision of equality is presently based more on optimism then reality. Although this may presently be true, the strength of the people against adversity has allowed advancement in our civil liberties. Formerly our nation promoted the belief that African Americans were property rather then people. This belief dates back to colonial times when Virginia's colonial leader John Smith implemented poor immigrants into the system ... African Americans were brought over and treated as indentured servants. However this African American servitude quickly progressed into slavery as tobacco became more of the backbone of the economy. For many years the issue of civil rights for African Americans was left unanswered. Until slowly African Americans and abolitionists of slavery banded together in order to resurrect the human rights of African Americans. At the same time a small women' ...
186: The War in Vietnam
The War in Vietnam Direct U.S. military participation in The Vietnam War, the nation's longest, cost fifty-eight thousand American lives. Only the Civil War and the two world wars were deadlier for Americans. During the decade of Vietnam beginning in 1964, the U.S Treasury spent over $140 billion on the war, enough money to fund urban ...
187: Cold War vs. United States
Cold War vs. United States The Cold War ended in 1991 after the Soviet Union fell apart. Since then, Russia's economy paralyzed, and the United States is three trillion dollars in debt, and both counties were weakened by the Cold War because of military spending. To have world peace does not mean that United States should increase its military strength. The Realist theory would argue that military strength is important to maintain peace both domestically ...
188: Medical Revolutions
The Civil War started as a picnic and ended in compassion, but in between were four hideous years of twisted flesh, burning fevers, rampant pus, and oozing raw stumps. Never before had America faced even a hint of such agony and the way it responded to the occasion is fascinating history. In a very real sense the War Between the States brought forth a medical revolution and, perhaps above all, an awareness of public health. The terrible, swift scalpel became less terrible: and the dank, dirty, dingy pesthouse evolved into a pavilion ...
189: Hobbes And Sovereignty
... works The Leviathan. In this piece of literature, Hobbes describes a natural world that is void of any form of government or society, and explains how everyone in this world lives in constant fear and war. The awful imagery that Hobbes projects of this world of anarchy, which he calls a state of nature, is not left without an explanation of how its people may escape into a lawful society. Thomas ... powers completely and unconditionally for the sovereign to use with the assumption that the sovereign will use it for the benefit of everyone. According to Hobbes, having an absolute sovereignty is the only way for war to end. He also believes that the sovereign's actions should not be subject to the legal control of anyone, therefore giving him complete unrestricted power that has no limits or constraints. Another point that ... then they would all still be on an equal level and society would be born and working. This is not very realistic. In the state of nature, everyone is absolutely, terrified and has been at war their entire lives. It is ridiculous to believe that these people are going to suddenly and simultaneously give up all their rights and powers to a single person, who is planning to dominate over ...
190: The Battle of Gettysburg
... and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great Civil War; testing whether this nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated can long endure. We have met on a great battlefield of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field as a final resting-place for those who here gave their lives that this nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that ...


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