<span>The central idea of the Bill of Rights is that the individual has certain rights that cannot be taken away or trampled by the government. Originating as the British Bill of Rights into what we now know as the first ten amendments of the United States Constitution, there is a central theme. That theme is that the individual should always have rights that are preserved and not to be taken away.</span>
Answer: A
Explanation: I just took the test
There were actually two Industrial Revolutions. The first occurred in Great Britain in the mid-17th and early 18th centuries as that nation became an economic and colonial powerhouse.
The second Industrial Revolution occurred in the U.S. beginning in the mid-1800s.
Britain's Industrial Revolution saw the emergence of water, steam, and coal as abundant sources of power, helping the U.K. dominate the global textile market during this era. Other advancements in chemistry, manufacturing, and transportation helped Britain become the world's first modern superpower, and its colonial empire ensured that its many technological innovations spread.
The Industrial Revolution in the U.S. began in the years and decades following the end of the Civil War. As the nation rebuilt its bonds, American entrepreneurs were building on the advancements made in Britain. In the coming years, new forms of transportation, innovations in industry, and the emergence of electricity would transform the nation as the U.K. had in an earlier era.
It first talks about how people take for granted their rights. Then it talks about how the jemcrow laws effected the African Americans, by not letting them use the same bathroom as white people, ext. The Jimcrow laws were apposed by a nonviolent protest. Then it moves on about how the civil rights movement as issues such as the ku klux Klan. slowly but surely thanks to people like Martin Luther king and Rosa Parks pushed the issue and helped end racial discrimination. The path to the end of the civil rights movement was hard. But with l patience and action the they were able to overcome the Jim crow laws and win freedom of all United Stated citizens (African American, white, Hispanic, ext) no matter what race.