Hi There!!
I think your answer is:
The Colors Of Revolution.
Because, The February 1986 this coup, also known as the People Power Revolution, brought down the 21-year old dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos. The use of yellow ribbons throughout the demonstrations led to it being called the Yellow Revolution.
The Blue Revolution, it means The demonstrators wore pale blue to demonstrate the long struggle for suffrage. The color of the signs of the protesters led to the naming of the revolution.
The Orange Revolution, it also means millions of Ukrainians, clad in orange, held nationwide nonviolent protests over perceived election fraud in the presidential election.
The Green Revolution, it means The protestors, who accused the government of voting fraud, wore green ribbons in support of defeated presidential candidate Hossein Mousay.
And, The Red Revolution. it means protesters took to the street for almost a month in Czechoslovakia November 1989. Named the Velvet Revolution due to its relative peaceful and bloodless nature.
So, I think the best answer is:
The Color Of Revolution.
Hope This Helps!!
Loserbrazts /('~○~')/
Um, maybe that sentence is not grammatically correct.<span />
Answer:
Explanation:
When analyzed as history, the Mao Zedong era (1949–1978) looks different than it did when scrutinized by social scientists. Ever since the founding of the People’s Republic, contemporary observers have identified an underlying reality at odds with the goals and policies pursued by top leaders in Beijing. That underlying reality, scholars found, was characterized by conflict, tension, and variation. Factionalism divided bureaucratic institutions; mass campaigns failed to achieve their aims; local officials subverted policies; groups pursued their own interests. In other words, state control was not always total or centralized but at times appeared limited and tenuous.
The native american were willing to share the land with the europeans but the europeans thought when they lived on the land they owned it