Answer:
If I am correct, some of the people started Jesus Yeshua which means "to rescue" or "to deliver"
Explanation:
The reason for this as he was a very powerful person, a lot of people looked up to him and what religion he created as well and they thought of him as their "savior", hence why they gave him the name Yeshua.
Do let me know if this is wrong or correct in the comments.
President Roosevelt and President Hoover differed in their approaches to dealing with the Great Depression because Roosevelt did many things to get the economy back in shape, while Hoover wanted to tackle the problem, but didn't want to get in depth with it.
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President Hoover had an impression that the stock market crash during 1929 was just a simple error in the market, and that it could easily be fixed. He said that it would be fixed if everyone acted normal and act like the stock market crash never happened. The government intervention for him was not a solution.
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President Roosevelt became president right after Hoover, and he noticed the problem the stock market crash had on people in the economy. The thing that he did is that he made a lot of public works projects. For example, the Works Projects Administration, was a organization which gave people short-time employments to keep them on the right track, and get the stock market crash off their minds and give them some income. He also made "bank holidays" which didn't allow people to take all of their money out of their bank account. He was doing many things to fix the economy from the Great Depression.
Answer:
It inspired people to believe that they should be free spiritually and politically.
Explanation:
The Great Awakening was a period in the history of English colonies in America which led to religious revival among the people. It came when religion has started growing weaker and a new movement called Enlightenment (rational thinkers).
This great Awakening led to the Revolutionary fights in-order to sustain their notion of nationalism and individual rights which was gotten through it. Several educational schools were established as a result of the revival.
The right answer is: he worried they would overrun government elections. :)
Keeping it brief, the Court -- little by little -- gradually asserted that certain rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights are, in some way, "in" the 14th too; that the 14th protects those rights from being violated by the states. But the Court never said that all of the rights in the Bill of Rights are "in" the 14th. Over the course of many decades the Court kept on expanding the list of which rights in the BoR are "in" the 14th, but all along the way the Court kept on saying too, that not all of the rights are "in." By the 1960's *most* of the rights in the BoR were "absorbed" into the 14th.