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    Before Europeans had ever set foot on North America the mainland was a tremendous area made up of different Native American countries that had their own particular unmistakable societies, history and societal progressive systems. The Natives here had the majority of the angles that people everywhere throughout the world consolidated into their social orders. They had societal structures, exchange courses and connections between different Native gatherings and were in no way, shape or form a…

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    The Last Days of Innocence by Meirion and Susie Harries recounts the events of a particular battle during World War I that had a significant impact on how the rest of the countries fighting in the war— both the Allies and the Central Powers— viewed America. Using the anecdote of the battle in Belleau Wood to explain why the world’s evaluation of America’s abilities changed is a strategy that both draws the reader into the story and provides a basis for the authors’ argument that the battle at…

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    and fifty years later. This poignant quote is part of a remarkably well-written speech, given at the Virginia Convention in 1775. The purpose of this meeting was to decide whether or not America should declare war on the British, which we ultimately did. Patrick Henry’s goal was to convince the convention that America could only prosper through separation by means of war. Henry used powerful imagery, careful diction, personal credibility, and keen logic to strongly deliver his message, that…

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    to The United States by different ways. Those people do not have good life in their countries, in which is one of the reasons why are they migrating to the Americas, so they could accomplish the American dream. As we all know,the “American Dream” is the life in where you find many opportunities throughout every day of…

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    While immigrants are blamed for coming to America and “taking” American jobs from the people, Lakoff and Ferguson point out that the employers that illegally employ these immigrants conveniently escape scrutiny, and are not labeled as “illegals” themselves (6). The refugees are vital for the for the economy, and contrary to popular misconception, the jobs that the economic refugees come to America for are not the ones that are heavily sought after, rather they are often…

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    Thomas King the author of The Inconvenient Indian, takes a chapter to explain the stories and history surrounding the past relations of Whites and Native Americans by presenting many common conceptions then describing why they are actually misconceptions. The Chapter is named Forget Columbus, the author elaborates by saying his wife told him not to start the book with Columbus but this becomes relevant when he continues to say that everyone believes they know what Columbus did and they revere…

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    Milestone Three Britain was viewed by loyalists as their protector of both lands and economy. The British military protected the borders of the Americas and the shipping routes on which they used for trading. The belief that " Agriculture, commerce and industry would resume their wonted vigor"(Inglis, 1776, p. 3). could not continue if the rebellion continued. Boasting the largest navy Britain established and protected trade routes throughout the world was what many believed is what the…

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    Gilles Havard’s article “Protection” and “Unequal Alliance”: The French Conception of Sovereignty over Indians in New France describes the way Indigenous people living in New France were perceived by the French authorities, the degree of citizenship that Indigenous people were given, and how these concepts of sovereignty affected the Indigenous communities both positively and negatively. In France, citizens were considered “regnicoles” (Havard, 2013) – citizens who had the full breadth of the…

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    On October 12, 1492 , Christopher Columbus landed on an island which is now considered part of the Caribbean. He was met with a strange group of people he assumed were from eastern India, thus he called them Indians. However, he would come to learn very quickly that this land was not India, but a whole new world yet discovered by his people. Columbus would go on to introduce European technology, plants, animals, and even diseases with the new world. He would also take not only the new world…

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    nation-state model and tried to extend their borders and influence. The United States was an unstable new republic, and whatever was left of the Americas was controlled by the European empires. Imperial extension would not go unchallenged. But, by the 1900, the United States and Canada had enveloped the rest of the North American landmass, and a large portion of Latin America would break free from European rule. Utilizing the ideals of popular sovereignty, free enterprise, industrial…

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