Who was the chinese red army leader

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: His name was General Zhu De..
Im pretty sure :P
Answer 2
Answer: First Red Army- General Zhu De. Communist Party Director Mao Zedong.

Related Questions

Is know as an activist president because he set the policies of his administration and sough to educate the public on national choices and priorities.
Which of the following statements describes the role of a colonial governor? He was elected by the people to represent them in the government. The governor controlled the assembly. He was head of the colony and carried out the king's orders.
The headquarters for both major parties are located in MarylandWashington D.C.New YorkVirginia
Ancient Greece gave us new ideas in mathematics, philosophy, drama, literature, journalism, medicine, science, and every other educational field. Name one famous ancient Greek and his contributions to Western thought.
What was the Treaty of Tordesillas?

In general, what is meant by civil rights?

Answers

rights to personal liberty established by the 13th and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and certain Congressional acts, especially as applied to an individual or a minority group.

Why was the Washington territory created?

Answers

The primary reason for establishing the new territory was that the distance to the Capital of Oregon Territory (Oregon City) was too far away to represent the citizens In what is now Washington. On August 29, 1851 the settlers met at Cowlitz Landing Where did discuss drafting a constitution.

George Rogers clark forced henry Hamilton's surrender at

Answers

the answer is vanencess
I think the answer is Vicennes
 

Why were the Federalist, Democratic-Republican, Democratic, and Republican parties created?

Answers

First, this gets to the matter of "why federalize?" We federalized to meet an external threat. There was England, to be sure, but the colonists were also well-traveled and could make their own predictions about Europe, and we see that, no matter what they might have predicted, France did indeed become a grave threat. So one reason (and this implies there are others) is to meet an external threat. What other reasons might there be? I don't know. But I would immediately jump to the thought of an internal threat. So you might think about that. The southern colonies never liked the constitution, and they became a threat soon afterward. One source to look at is Novus Ordo Seclorum: Intellectual Origins of the Constitution, by McDonald. But let me get back on point here. Federalism is not the only way to meet the needs of a nation. There are other options, such as unitary state. But we had a system of entrenched states, and we had inherited a common-law tradition in which the sovereignty of local governments was hallowed by tradition. And we had just fought a war of separation that revealed the weaknesses of a confederacy; it's not unified, and a confederacy doesn't cede any power to the center, so there is no strong national defense with a unified command, which is vital to warmaking. When a group of local governments, or baronies or cantons or states or whatever, confederates, they are limiting power to the center, but all that does is shift power over people to local control. The nation's first government, the First Continental Congress, was not able to hold the nation together under the strain of these wars between France and England. Witness George Washington's difficulties holding the army together as he was outmaneuvered and chased all around Baltimore and New York by the British commander, Howe (who was under Cornwallis). 

So there were 2 sides to the debate: the Federalists and the Anti-Feds. The Feds were actually anti-democratic. They wanted to limit the impacts of faction. This is a huge debate. The Feds are represented by "Publius," the collective name for John Jay, Madison, and Hamilton. They won the Constitutional debate. 

Jefferson was not a framer of the Constitution; he was in France when it was signed, and he was an Anti-Fed, and this is the party that lost the debates. His contribution to American political thought is the thought of a living document. He wrote the Declaration, which is based on Enlightenment liberalism ("classical liberalism") and he felt that people were best governed by a "natural aristocracy" of enlightened freehold farmers. This does not preclude owning slaves, by the way. The liberal argument (which is really the only argument) for justifying slavery is that you can"t interfere with the natural right of a man to own a slave. (!) This is the argument later on during the Civil War, in Calhoun's "Southern Defense." 

The Federalists were the "Radical Republicans." The Anti-Feds were the "Jeffersonian Democrats" or "Democratic Republicans."

Later, Jacksonian democracy took hold. This was the thought that drove Manifest Destiny and encouraged the pioneering spirit. The Jacksonian Democrats relied heavily on government assistance since they were pushing westward. So there is this ideally-democratic thought of self-sufficiency: instead of being "self-sufficient" in the Jeffersonian sense, the pioneers prized hard work and the ability to fix whatever needed fixing. It gave meat to the phrase "American ingenuity." It also fueled women's rights and suffrage later, because pioneer women were expected to work just as hard as the men. They showed that they were not just Eastern Belles who relied on men for their station in a leisure class. 

But at the same time, the Jacksonian Democrats, for all the talk of self-sufficiency, relied on the government for assistance. They were pushing westward before, during, and after the Civil War, which is when the Indian Wars were taking off, with their presence pressuring the Indians. So pioneers settled around forts for protection, and they required assistance in linking up transportation networks on land and in the riverine systems. 

Conservative democrats favored the South, which was trying to keep the East and West from linking up. The linkage would mean the death of the Southern Master class, which was dependent on slavery for its economy. Calhoun pushed to have the country form up into 4 "economic zones," each region having veto power over the other. This was just an attempt to stall the inevitable economic linkage of the East and West as the nation grew. In 1857, Dred Scott split the Democratic Party along abolitionist lines. Chief Justice Taney was a Democrat, and the dissents came from the 2 Republican justices. So it rent the Democratic Party in two, with Dixiecrats on one side and the "progressives" on the other. Eventually, the conservatives in the Democratic Party defected to the GOP. 


Three of the four noble truths taught by Buddha are stated below.Which one is NOT one of his four noble truths

Answers

You forgot the options, but I think it will help if i list all the noble truth: then you can compare the options given to you!

1. all experiences are ultimately not satisfying
2.craving for pleasure will result in rebirth (which is not a good thing)
3. putting end to this graving will also result in rebirth
4. following the Noble Eightfold Path will result in end of craving and NOT in rebirth  (not being reborn is good)

Ending worldly desires will end suffering

What was the goal of assimilation?For Native Americans to learn to read and write

For Native Americans to farm the land west of the Mississippi River

For Native Americans to teach the Europeans near their territories how to hunt and fish

For Native Americans to change their ways so they were more like people of European descent

Answers

The goal of these reformers was to use education as a tool to “assimilate” Indian tribes into the mainstream of the “American way of life,” a Protestant ideology of the mid-19th century. Indian people would be taught the importance of private property, material wealth and monogamous nuclear families.(D)

Answer: It is D, for Native Americans to change their ways.

Explanation:

I got it right on the test. :)