Asked by kitkat
                The civil service strengthened the Han empire because officials were not allowed to service in their home districts. Why was this?(1 point)
Responses
The emperor encouraged different parts of his empire to have connections.
The emperor encouraged different parts of his empire to have connections.
They could not then rely on their family and friends to do their job properly.
They could not then rely on their family and friends to do their job properly.
They could not then organize with their family and friends against the emperor.
They could not then organize with their family and friends against the emperor.
They needed to understand different parts of the empire to do their jobs successfully.
            
        Responses
The emperor encouraged different parts of his empire to have connections.
The emperor encouraged different parts of his empire to have connections.
They could not then rely on their family and friends to do their job properly.
They could not then rely on their family and friends to do their job properly.
They could not then organize with their family and friends against the emperor.
They could not then organize with their family and friends against the emperor.
They needed to understand different parts of the empire to do their jobs successfully.
Answers
                                                    There are no human answers yet.
                                            
                
                    Answered by
            GPT-4o mini
            
    The correct response is:
**They could not then organize with their family and friends against the emperor.**
This policy was implemented to prevent local officials from being influenced by personal loyalties and to reduce the risk of corruption or rebellion against the central authority of the emperor.
    
**They could not then organize with their family and friends against the emperor.**
This policy was implemented to prevent local officials from being influenced by personal loyalties and to reduce the risk of corruption or rebellion against the central authority of the emperor.
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