<span>the blacklisting of suspected communists
Those suspected of communism were removed from their jobs and often investigated by the government.
Blacklisting prevented people from getting homes, jobs, and were investigated and watched by the government. McCarthyism created fear and people turning in neighbors and acquaintances for any odd behavior. </span><span />
The Chinese people of the time believed that the country was working against the best interest of the people and in the interest of the spreading Western and Japanese powers. This is why a group of people started the boxer rebellion. This was a nationalist movement that wanted China to be independent and work in the interest of China and Chinese people and not in the interest of foreigners.
On April 24,1915, the Ottoman government arrests some 235 to 270 Armenian intellectuals and cultural leaders in Constantinople,deports them to a prison in the interior, where many of them were tortured and killed. This day is often referred to as the "Red Sunday". The arrested Armenian intellectuals and cultural leaders were deported to holding centers near Ankara. Overall the total estimated Armenians arrested were nearly 2345. The Tehcir Law passed on 29th of May in the year 1915 the people that were detained were allowed to be relocated within the Ottoman Empire.
People during the Industrial Revolution lived lives of constant work and sleep. They did dangerous factory work for little pay and lived in rags for small amounts of money. However, they accepted the conditions they lived in (all up until the Peasant riots) because they needed a way to support their family. When children were old enough to walk, you bet they were working with their parents. Factory owners didn't treat their workers well because they didn't have to. For a long while, people just accepted their filth and rags and let the rich stay rich.
I think that the Miranda warning is good because the problem was trying to determine what counted as a coerced confession. Well into the 20th century, police officers would beat suspects, or keep defendants in isolation for days, to get a confession. The methods of police interrogation were so diverse, and the effects of isolation, intimidation and defendant ignorance so varied, that appellate courts found it difficult to determine afterward whether a confession had been truly voluntary.