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Nitella [24]
4 years ago
6

What common problem in Tunisia and Egypt led to the Arab Spring?

History
2 answers:
andrey2020 [161]4 years ago
5 0
<span>desire for peace with Israel
</span>
Novosadov [1.4K]4 years ago
5 0

The common problem in Tunisia and Egypt that led to the Arab Spring was the frustration with dictatorships. Option A is correct.

During the Arab Spring in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya citizens overthrew their dictatorial governments.

Since people believed that the dictator lived a life of luxury while the common people found it hard to earn a decent living increasingly protest led to the overthrown of the dictator of Tunisia. Eventually, the protests inspired similar uprisings in Arab world's largest country, Egypt.

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What was the relationship between racism and slavery?
Rama09 [41]

Answer:

Racism is "prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against someone of a different race <u>based on the belief that one's own race is superior</u>."

When one believes he/his race is superior, he by default looks down on others. This leads to "prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against someone of a different race" because he doesn't consider their feelings and/or opinions worth as much as his own if not completely worthless. In a case where one considers another as inferior he may even subjugate them.

3 0
3 years ago
What was life like for African Americans in the South after Reconstruction ended? How did it differ from life under slavery?
Pavlova-9 [17]

Answer:

raid it all

Explanation:

The Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 freed African Americans in rebel states, and after the Civil War, the Thirteenth Amendment emancipated all U.S. slaves wherever they were. As a result, the mass of Southern blacks now faced the difficulty Northern blacks had confronted—that of a free people surrounded by many hostile whites. One freedman, Houston Hartsfield Holloway, wrote, “For we colored people did not know how to be free and the white people did not know how to have a free colored person about them.”

Even after the Emancipation Proclamation, two more years of war, service by African American troops, and the defeat of the Confederacy, the nation was still unprepared to deal with the question of full citizenship for its newly freed black population. The Reconstruction implemented by Congress, which lasted from 1866 to 1877, was aimed at reorganizing the Southern states after the Civil War, providing the means for readmitting them into the Union, and defining the means by which whites and blacks could live together in a nonslave society. The South, however, saw Reconstruction as a humiliating, even vengeful imposition and did not welcome it.

During the years after the war, black and white teachers from the North and South, missionary organizations, churches and schools worked tirelessly to give the emancipated population the opportunity to learn. Former slaves of every age took advantage of the opportunity to become literate. Grandfathers and their grandchildren sat together in classrooms seeking to obtain the tools of freedom.

After the Civil War, with the protection of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution and the Civil Rights Act of 1866, African Americans enjoyed a period when they were allowed to vote, actively participate in the political process, acquire the land of former owners, seek their own employment, and use public accommodations. Opponents of this progress, however, soon rallied against the former slaves' freedom and began to find means for eroding the gains for which many had shed their blood

6 0
2 years ago
Why was Persia ultimately unsuccessful in conquering Greece?
kherson [118]
My own answer is because they just didn't care for the small land of Greece. Greece was poor and small. Invading Greece and maintaining it would probably have cost quite a lot more than what small profit it actually had. I think Xerxes was foolishly trying to set an example of how people who offended his empire would have been treated and failed, obviously. The Persians probably even thought of the Greeks as primitive, although today we know they weren't, for religious and lifestyle points of view (It is probably quite obvious how sacrificing an animal before every single battle and river crossing and marriage and many more sounded hilarious to the Persians as Zarostrian monotheists) and so miscalculated their strength at first and then totally abandoned them by the time Aristides was finished with the Delian league and had took back most of Ionia and Byzantium was returned to the Greeks. 
No Persian ever thought the mistrusting Greeks would ever be united and strong enough of a military unit to be able to pose a threat to their nation. apparently though, according to Diodorus Sicculus, the Persians were interested in the lands of Sicily, because Xerxes had thought it appropriate to send a massive invasion toward the people of Syracuse at the same time that he was campaigning in Greece, the invasion being arranged and managed by the Carthaginians who were by now an ally of the Persian empire.
Note also that after the king's peace was brought about, the Persians never broke their pact, although they interfered greatly in the Peloponessian war and dictated outcomes for specific battles, or supplied Sparta with enough gold so the Spartans could greatly upgrade the size of their fleet and to be able to match or at least contest the strength of the Athenian fleet with the help of their league members.
<span>Conclusively, I suggest the Persians failed to take Greece because they did not wish to conquer it. The land was poor and rough, unsuitable for farming. It was far from the capitals and hard to control, should something happen in Greece it would take at least two to four days for a Chapar to reach the king in Susa or Persepolis. Furthermore, the people of the land were easy to revolt and demanding democracy and this was not to the liking of the monarchic Persian empire, although they allowed the Ionians to have their own popular governments, the Ionians were easier to control than the Hellenes in Greece. Thus the Greeks were best left to themselves.</span>
5 0
4 years ago
The U.S was happy to have Alaska when it discovered lots of:
ZanzabumX [31]

Im 75% to 99% sure that the answer is B-Iron Hope this Helped

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
5. Which of the following was part of the Fugitive Slave Act passed in 1850?
kotykmax [81]
<span>This Fugitive Slave Act required all citizens to catch and return runaway slaves</span>
6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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