Sociological research "supports" this belief.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The social research support this belief because human mind is combination of observance and analysis. Where humans observe whatever is happening in environment and respond accordingly by default, which is majorly common in teenagers or small age group people.
Parents or guardians have huge concern regarding the environment or society in which their children grew.Thus it is very important for parents to exclude children from such environment, as in such period they rapidly get influenced without having second thought.
Answer:
carried water to American soldiers during the Battle of Monmouth
Explanation:
She helped
<span>Sara most likely conducted a private study. We are unsure if the students she interviewed where made aware that their information would be shared. There are conflict of interests regarding the results of her survey. There are chances that the students answers were not true or some students just answered with the most social acceptable answers. Sara should not have shared this information.</span>
Answer:
Dred Scott
Explanation:
The Dred Scott case, also known as Dred Scott v. Sandford, the case led to a decade-long battle for freedom by a Black slave named Dred Scott, which proceeded through several courts before reaching the U.S. Supreme Court, whose decision frustrated abolitionists, gave momentum to the anti-slavery movement, and served as a milestone for the anti-slavery movement.
Maximilien Robespierre has always provoked strong feelings. For the English he is the ‘sea-green incorruptible’ portrayed by Carlyle, the repellent figure at the head of the Revolution, who sent thousands of people to their death under the guillotine. The French, for the most part, dislike his memory still more. There is no national monument to him, though many of the revolutionaries have had statues raised to them. Robespierre is still considered beyond the pale; only one rather shabby metro station in a poorer suburb of Paris bears his name.
Although Robespierre, like most of the revolutionaries, was a bourgeois, he identified with the cause of the urban workers, the <span>sans-culottes </span>as they came to be known, and became a spokesman for them. It is for this reason that he came to dominate the Revolution in its most radical phase. This was the period of the Jacobin government, which lasted from June 1793 to Robespierre’s overthrow in July 1794; the months when the common people became briefly the masters of the first French republic, which had been proclaimed in September 1792. It is also known, more ominously, as the Terror.
The enigmatic figure of Robespierre takes us to the heart of the Revolution, and throws light both on its ideals, and on the violence that indelibly scarred it.