Answer:
Fair housing is a civil right protected by the Fair Housing Act (FHA). And yet, housing discrimination and segregation still persist, causing long-term societal effects in America. Segregation and discrimination in housing harm people’s health, their ability to accumulate wealth and the environment.In 1967, eight days after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Congress passed FHA, which was the final piece of the civil rights legislation passed in the 1960s. FHA prohibits discrimination based upon race, color, national origin, religion, gender, disability or familial status in the housing arena. The housing arena includes: renting a house, buying a house (sales), getting a mortgage (lending), appraisals and homeowner’s insurance.
Explanation:
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This is not merely a hypothetical but a reality.
Take Rwanda.
Rwanda was drawn without an understanding of the ethnic make up.
And, in effect, a minority population was given control over a majority population.
This is problematic as it creates tensions that should not exist.
Movement of people to a new area or country in order to find work or better living conditions.
The holocaust was a moment is history that we often look back on to how devastating it was and learn now not to do it again. Germany was suddenly taken over by the Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and he was a man or perfection. Everything had to be his way. he wanted to create the perfect race and by that he took mainly jews but, he also took people with disabilities and people who didn’t fit his standards to concentration camps where they were held in confinement, starved, beaten and most likely killed. Over 6 million people were killed and the reason we know that this was so major is because it started a war. A world war to be exact. People tried to get people out of concentration camps and help hide the ones in danger. We know now that this was a horrible set of events that took place and we hope to never see it again.