Answer:
B. False
Explanation:
John F. Kennedy was a very caring President, and he cared about all of the American people. He was even moved by the speeches of MLK, and was sympathetic to black rights (a rarity in the 1950's and 1960's)
Answer:
Much of the art and the artists creating Chicano Art were heavily influenced by Chicano Movement (El Movimiento) which began in the 1960s. Chicano art was influenced by post-Mexican Revolutionideologies, pre-Columbian art, European painting techniques and Mexican-American social, political and cultural issues.[1] The movement worked to resist and challenge dominant social norms and stereotypes for cultural autonomy and self-determination. Some issues the movement focused on were awareness of collective history and culture, restoration of land grants, and equal opportunity for social mobility. Throughout the movement and beyond, Chicanos have used art to express their cultural values, as protest or for aesthetic value. The art has evolved over time to not only illustrate current struggles and social issues, but also to continue to inform Chicano youth and unify around their culture and histories. Chicano art is not just Mexican-American artwork: it is a public forum that emphasizes otherwise "invisible" histories and people in a unique form of American art.
The Articles of Confederation were the first written form of government of the United States, after the American Revolution.<em> Under the Articles of Confederation the central government was weak, and power was held on states out fear of a tyrannical government. T</em><em>his represented the Americans' distrust of a strong central government after being governed by a monarchy.</em><em> </em>The Articles of Confederation set the ground for the creation of the Constitution of 1787.
Answer/Explanation:
Federalists tried to convince people by stating that powers designed for different purposes would create a powerful but not abusive governing system.
Anti-Federalists convinced people that a strong government would take away the people's freedom and they would be an "oppressed subject of a great American Empire."