Answer:
The Black Lives Matter protests that have followed the killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor by police officers remind Margaret Burnham of 1968. At that time, the national response to the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. combined with ongoing protests over civil rights and the Vietnam War to plunge an already divided nation more deeply into turmoil.
“This is taking place in a world that is not only deeply fractured, but also deeply fragile because of the coronavirus, the economic crisis that makes the country look a little bit like 1929, and the existential threat of climate change,” says Burnham, university distinguished professor of law at Northeastern. “It’s everything collapsing all around us.”
Explanation:
Your welcome
the answer is D. Germany.
It was "(A) John Peter Zenger" who was not involved in the religious
<span>revivals in the colonies, since Zenger was instead famous for publishing articles that got him arrested and tried. </span>
He was educated by private tutors and elite schools (Groton and Harvard), and early on began to admire and emulate his fifth cousin, Theodore Roosevelt<span>, elected president in 1900. While in college, </span>Franklin<span>fell in love with Theodore's niece (and his own distant cousin), Anna Eleanor </span>Roosevelt<span>, and they married in 1905.</span>
Answer:
take war against Muslims in order to reclaim the Holy Land, with a cry of “Deus vult!” or “God wills it!”