There's many answers to this
1. repressive regimes try to lower the trust of the media
2. They don't let people say anything that might be harmful to the government
3. They use force/violence to get want they want from their citizens
The illegal voting would have been stopped or a least greatly reduced with the implementation of proper voter registration and state IDs. Of course, with the rudimentary technology of the era, falsification of ID documents would have been relatively easier than it is today. However IDs and voter registration would have presented an additional obstacle to border ruffians.
The violence would only have been stopped by the concourse of a national guard, a state police and civil deputies from the state protecting voter, voting locations and the transportation of ballots.
The answer to this question is <span>It banned slavery in much of the previous Louisiana Territory except for Missouri.
The missouri compromise was enacted in 1820 as an effort that created by the government in order to balance the power between the northern states and the southern states that voiced by </span><span>, Representative </span>James Tallmadge Jr.<span>, a </span>Jeffersonian Republican<span> from </span><span>New York</span>
The Muslim scholars of what historians call the School of Toledo (12th century) were responsible for the translation of many Greek texts to the Arabic and then to Latin. Because of these translations, the studying of those texts increased and they started to be read on European universities.
Many Toledo translations were important for major Renaissance scientists as Roger Bacon (c. 1219/20 – c. 1292) and Copernicus (1473-1543), for example.
The re-discovery of ancient Greek texts due to their translation from the School of Toledo is an example of cultural diffusion. The work done in Toledo kept those texts alive and being read until they found interested audiences in the rest of Europe.