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They thought they might turn on them.
Too much speculation
The theory used by southerners to justify the secession of the southern states is that the states voluntarily entered into a union with each other, and should be able therefore to voluntarily withdraw from that union should they so desire, particularly since nothing in the US constitution states that the union is irrevocable.
The Age of Reason, also called the Enlightenment, occured during the seventeenth and eighteenth century (1600's and lasted until the late 1700's). This was a period in history when philosophers emphasized the use of reason as the best method of learning the truth.
An antinomian is someone who doesn't believe in the universality of morals. I.e someone who believes that morals change distinctly with the times. One could use it as a way to justify something like racism. Has to do with cultural relativism.
They were in use in the early 1900's.
Don't know maybe
There are many reasons to use to justify training for the testing team as part of its career development. The first reason is to make sure the test team is capable of the real work.
to be able to use the one program on heaps of computers on the network!
They did not need to justify it, in their minds. They believed that there were witches harming children in Salem and that was a reason to go on a witch hunt. And if they ever had to justify their actions to a modern person, I suppose that's what they'd say.
their reason is to take over the island to expand their military population and use the islands as their own place to attack the u.s.
Deplorable and unconstitutional. The Japanese Americans were not spies nor were they the enemy of the Americans. They were not even allowed to be citizens. The only ones that were citizens were the ones born in the US. The leaders of the government overreacted. They wanted to intern the Germans and Italians but prominent people stopped them. No one spoke up for the Japanese however. The Supreme Court declared the internment unconstitutional and I totally agree. The leaders left them in the internment camps long after the war was over. Those wonderful people lost their homes and their possessions and the respect of the American people. They had nothing to do with the Japanese of Japan. The internment places were ramshackle, filthy, cold places with no furniture or adequate bathrooms. They suffered for years all due to the arrogant, racist American leaders and the general populous who did not rise up to stop the madness.
She tried to justify her actions by explaining the reasoning behind her decision.
world war 1 killed the most because they had more people
State's rights
Japanese expansion in the early to mid-20th century was driven by a desire to secure natural resources and raw materials to support industrialization, as well as a quest for geopolitical influence and power in the region. It was also fueled by a belief in Japanese racial superiority and a desire to establish a Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere under Japanese control.
The most common reason for the use of force by law enforcement is that the arrestee resisted arrest - which in 95% of all cases is also true.