What do you think the answer is?
There is something called BRAINLY use it some time
"The increase in negative campaigning matches to a proportional decrease in voter turnout, showing a strong relationship" is the emerging <span>relationship trend between negative campaign tone and voter turnout that is depicted on the graph starting in 1988. I hope the answer has come to your help.</span>
Perhaps the best one might be able to say for the Munich Pact and the policy of appeasement is that it aimed to "give peace a chance" (as the song lyric goes), and that maybe it delayed the start of an overall European war. But it does seem that the ambitions of Adolph Hitler and the Nazi party were making war an eventual inevitability for Europe in the 1930s.
The policy of appeasement was signed by the prime ministers of Britain and France with Hitler in Munich in September, 1938. They had given in to Germany's annexation of the Sudentland as a German territory, including the evacuation of any Czech population from the region. After signing the Munich Pact, Hitler took control of all of Czechoslovakia (in March, 1939). Britain and France still did not pursue war with Germany when that happened. But when Germany invaded Poland in September, 1939, it was beyond clear that appeasing Hitler hadn't worked, and war was pursued.
Controversial flag that flew over Georgia from 1956-2001 due to the flag's prominent Confederate emblem. = <span>1956 State Flag
</span><span>Leader in the Civil Rights movement; leader of the Student Non-Violent
Coordinating Committee; U.S. Representative (1986-present). = </span><span>Congressman John Lewis
</span>The famous jobs and civil rights march led by Dr. Martin Luther King, where he gave his famous "I Have a Dream" speech. = <span>March on Washington
</span><span>Federal legislation, signed into law by President Lyndon Johnson in 1964, that forbade discrimination on the basis of race and sex in
hiring, firing, and promotion = </span><span>Civil Rights act of 1964
</span>Civil rights organization by college students that urged non-violent protests and sit-in; They organized voter registrations in the South and led the Albany Movement. = <span>Student Non-Violent Coordination Committee
</span><span>Supreme Court cases that struck down the policy of separate but
equal and mandated the desegregation of public schools. = </span><span>Brown vs the Board of Education
</span><span>Investigation by lawyer John Sibley to determine what should be done about
integration in the state; though 60% of Georgians claimed they would rather close the public schools than
integrate, Sibley recommended that public schools desegregate on a limited basis. = </span><span>Sibley Commission</span>