Answer:
They believed that internees should not help in the war effort because the internment of the Japanese was unjust.
Explanation:
With the attack on Pearl Harbor during the Second World War, the war in America began to form internally. The Axis powers in which japan was a part of in conflict with the Allied Powers, which included the United States. And as such, action was taken against the Japanese- Americans living/ settling in America.
As it was the Axis powers (Japan) that attacked an American military base, the United States' government began to order the internment of its Japanese-American citizens just because of their physical connection to the enemy. With the attack deemed as a huge threat to the national security of America, every Japanese descent American was ordered to move to the internment camps, leading to a massive round-up. Though it was never a case of trying to 'punish' them for what their home country had done to their adopted country, it was evident that the move was to 'isolate' any Japanese man and restrict any chance of an 'informer' or 'secret agent'.
So, in protest to this order, the internees objected to anyone who chose to work for the US government because the internment was an unjust and unfair act in itself to the Japanese people.
Answer:
The Nazi Party
Explanation:
While in prison, Adolf Hitler wrote his book called "Mein Kampf", which details Germany's current problems and blames them on the Jewish. He would later establish the Nazi Party and become the supreme ruler of Germany. While in power, he started a genocide campaign against the Jewish. The Jewish were killed by mobile firing squads, and later, gas chambers. At the end of the fuhrer's reign, over 60% of the European Jewish population were killed.
The options of the question are, A) Reconstruction resulted in positive changes in all aspects of Southern black’s lifes, including politics, education, and escaping poverty. B) Reconstruction did not affect blacks directly because it was aimed at reconstructing state governments were blacks had no vote. C) Reconstruction afforded Blacks freedom and voting rights but also created an interracial struggle that often erupted in violence against blacks. D) Reconstruction affected blacks by reversing their access to education and political equality and restricting access to economic benefits. E) Reconstruction affected blacks in creating an atmosphere in which Southerners felt that blacks would outpace them in education and economics.
The correct answer is C) Reconstruction afforded Blacks freedom and voting rights but also created an interracial struggle that often erupted in violence against blacks.
<em>The sentence that best describes how reconstruction affected Southern Blacks is “Reconstruction afforded Blacks freedom and voting rights but also created an interracial struggle that often erupted in violence against blacks.”
</em>
The opportunity to get an education was one of the most important aspects that Reconstruction gave the African Americans, as well as the right to vote. But the problem was that the differences the Union and the Confederated states had in the War were translated to politics. So, yes, Reconstruction afforded Blacks freedom and voting rights but also created an interracial struggle that often erupted in violence againts blacks. During the Reconstruction, the hostility against the African Americans was constant.
Black lives matter. period.
The public school students' <em>silent</em> protest, by using <em>symbols</em>, in the form of armbands, during school time, cost the students a suspension, because it was considered a <em>violation of a school rule</em>. After the case had been judged by the Supreme Court, they finally won the case. But the outcome could be different, if their protest used "indecent speech" or promoted illegal drug use.