The correct answer is A) the President's attempts to restrict conservative influence.
<em>The social condition that was the main factor prompting President Eisenhower's speech was the President's attempts to restrict conservative influence.</em>
In that famous speech, United States President said people should not be afraid to learn and read books, as long the information contained in the books did not affect the decency of the American values. He said that the only form of censorship should be the one that censors information that attacks the values of America. In that speech, President Eisenhower expressed "how will we defeat Communism unless we know what it is, what it teaches, and why does it have such an appeal for men, why so many people are swearing allegiance to it."
The other options of the question were b) the churches attempt to promote religious tolerance, c) MLK attempts to increase literacy rates, and d) Senator McCarthy's attempts to limit free speech.
The answer is A) Iberian Peninsula.
Granada was an Islamic Kingdom on the Iberian Peninsula, the peninsula which contains modern-day Spain and Portugal. Granada was the last Islamic Kingdom to fall to the Christians during La Reconquista, the reconquest of Iberia by the Christian Spanish Kingdoms.
The answer is B, because the Song would make all government candidates undergo the civil service exam. Only if they passed would they be able to become part of the bureaucracy.
Explanation:
muje nhi pata hai okk byyy
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although the question does not provide options, we can say that the emperor’s decision to move the capital to Edo impacted the position on Japan’s hierarchies in that it represented the end of the traditional epoch of classical Japanese traditions, culture, and the conservative society. This Edo period, also known as the Tokuwaga period, started in 1603 and ended in 1867, with the Meiji Restoration that started the following year. During the Edo period, the Emperor was very careful to avoid any external influence that could bring consequences to the traditional and conservative life of Japan. During those years, the merchants surged as a new and prominent class, and the Emperor rejected any Christian influences.