The white Americans didn't want the slaves to learn how to read and write because if they did the slaves would've read the bible and knew that it was about them.
They would've known that Africa was the motherland and that they were the first people on earth and that they were worth more than the white Americans told them. The white Americans wanted to control the slaves and keep them in fear of them that's why they beat them every time they caught a slave trying to read it. Even when the slave pastors would try to have church the white Americans would tell them what to preach and if they didn't do as they said the white Americans would beat them or even kill them.
The answer may be 1. It can’t be 2 or 4 because they corolate
The post–World
War II economic expansion, also known as the postwar economic boom, the long
boom, and the Golden Age of Capitalism, was a period of economic prosperity in
the mid-20th century which occurred, following the end of World War II in 1945, and lasted until the early
1970s. It ended with the collapse of the Bretton Woods monetary system in 1971, the 1973 oil
crisis<span>, and the 1973–1974
stock market crash, which led to the </span>1970s
recession. Narrowly
defined, the period spanned from 1945 to 1952, with overall growth lasting well
until 1971, though there are some debates on dating the
period. Booms in
individual countries differed, some starting as early as 1945, and overlapping
the rise of the East Asian economies into the 1980s or 1990s.
Books.. and ..... <span>News of his journey's increased interest in Asia.</span>
The answer is B. Although the colonists were the same British citizens as in Britain, they were treated very differently. Colonists were seen as poor, unsophisticated underlings that could not think for themselves. The British saw themselves as an older brother, someone who watches over the colonists to make sure they don’t make a mess of things.