Answer:
A. Instead of being dignified artisans, workers were now laborers for a boss
Explanation:
According to socialists, while industrialization brought enormous productivity and more wealth, it did not necessarily benefit workers.
Workers, who were artisans or farmers before, became subjugated to the capitalists, losing connection to their jobs, and becoming alienated.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Unfortunately, you did include context or reference to know what you are talking about. You write the name "Nelson." Nelson who? In what context? At what time? In what part of US history? Which events?
You need to include the proper contexts and references to better help you.
Trying to be of help we are going to assume that you are talking about George Nelson and his relationship to the fur trade in colonial American times. If that is teh case, then we can comment on the following.
George Nelson was born in Quebec, in 1798 after his parents relocated during the American Revolutionary War.
The trials and tribulations that Nelson describes were the ones presented in the fur trade when he worked for the "XY Company" in 1802. He was in charge of a fur trade outpost in the Northern Michigan Territory(modern-day Wisconsin). He was very young, he was 16 years old, and his inexperience created many conflicts buy his intelligence was an asset for the company.
Later in his life, we worked for the North West Company and the Hudson Bay Company. During his work life as a clerk in these companies, he kept the journals of the daily events. Today, the importance of these documents is that the journals describe the life and trade during those interesting times in North America.
Answer:
A political party bring together people with a same political ideas....
The colonists were angry because it raised the money on sugar by three cents and added a tax on non-British coffee and certain wines.
Little Rock, Arkansas is the correct answer.
The Little Rock Crisis was an event in Little Rock, Kansas where nine African-American students were prevent from entering the newly desegregated high school, Little Rock Central High School. After the governor called for a National Guard blockade to prevent the student from entering the school, federal troops were sent in by President Eisenhower. These troops acted as an armed escort for the nine students and enforced integration.