Desire for control
The Europeans were motivated to claim land in North America because of the wealth of Natural Resources, the rumors of gold and the expansion of their respective empires. England, France and Spain were all fighting to create the largest, wealthiest empire.
The King of France wanted to claim land and he wanted to find a route to China.
True
The crusades were motivated by Cristian Europe's desire to claim the holy land. Also they believed that they were on a mission from god to get rid of anyone who was not Christian. That made the men fighting in them more willing and inspired. Them believing that they were on a holy mission gave motivation.
I have never heard of this argument, but there is unlikely to be any truth to it. The claim is too obviously a homophobic one, designed to denigrate homosexuals in general.
A big lie is a policy of making false politically motivated claims which are emphatic enough that listeners will take notice and reckon that the claim must be true because no single person would dare to question them.
Francisco Pizarro's journey was to explore and conquer lands in South America, particularly looking for the Inca Empire to conquer and claim their riches for Spain. Pizarro was motivated by the desire for wealth, power, and spreading Christian beliefs.
Pizarro first entered the Inca Empire in search of wealth and glory. He aimed to conquer the Inca Empire and claim its riches for Spain, motivated by tales of Inca gold and the desire to expand Spain's empire in the New World.
no you have to make a claim for it to be regestered as a claim
a claim that has all the information to have the claim paid.
Type of claim?
No, it is not true. Actually, this is a political claim, and both sides make it-- especially in election years. The claim that Michelle Obama is overspending was similar to one made against other first ladies, including Nancy Reagan, Laura Bush and Hillary Clinton. In all cases, there is not much evidence to support it, but it gets partisans on both sides very motivated, even if the claims are generally exaggerated.