Answer:
The difficult political and social climate that the United States was going through, both in external relations and in its internal organization, led to one of the most notable revolutions in the country and in the entire world. The conflict of <u>the Vietnam War</u> raised suspicions in many North American citizens, who, after the two world wars, were not clear about the purpose of another war that, they claimed, would only bring suffering. On the other hand, there were new protests by the African-American population in the country and led by Martin Luther King Jr. in t<u>he movement for civil rights for African-Americans.</u> All this was gradually consolidated after the shock caused in the American society by <u>the murders of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King</u>
Explanation:
This beginning of the decade is representative of a period that would be characterized by international confrontations and protests by an increasingly critical citizenry with the actions of its rulers and the situation that was taking shape in the world after the post-war economic recovery: protest movements against <u>the Vietnam war</u>; against the invasion of the Soviet troops in Czechoslovakia, in the Prague Spring; in May '68 against the established order, during the student and union revolts that began in France and spread rapidly to other countries. The sociocultural effects of these protest movements are still being felt today. It is also a decade in which a large number of political assassinations occur, an example of which is <u>the deaths of John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King and Robert F. Kennedy.</u>
Answer:
D, Jefferson Davis is my great great uncle
Explanation:
Answer:
the land east of the Mississippi river
Explanation:
In the Treaty of Paris, the British Crown formally recognized American independence and ceded most of its territory east of the Mississippi River to the United States, doubling the size of the new nation and paving the way for westward expansion.
Answer:
Denmark
Explanation:
In 1862, he returned to Prussia and was appointed prime minister by the new king, Wilhelm I. Bismarck was now determined to unite the German states into a single empire, with Prussia at its core. With Austrian support, he used the expanded Prussian army to capture the provinces of Schleswig and Holstein from Denmark.