Answer:
Starting with Illinois in 1911, the "mother's pension" movement sought to provide state aid for poor fatherless children who would remain in their own homes cared for by their mothers. In effect, poor single mothers would be excused from working outside the home. Welfare reformers argued that the state pensions would also prevent juvenile delinquency since mothers would be able to supervise their children full-time.
By 1933, mother's pension programs were operating in all but two states. They varied greatly from state to state and even from county to county within a state. In 1934, the average state grant per child was $11 a month. Administered in most cases by state juvenile courts, mother's pensions mainly benefitted families headed by white widows. These programs excluded large numbers of divorced, deserted, and minority mothers and their children.
Answer:
a.) Operating big businesses.
Explanation:
<span>capitalism: private property
socialism: government property
capitalism: market determines what gets produced and consumed
socialism: government regulation does
capitalism: long-term economic growth (despite short-term recessions)
socialism: steady stagnation
capitalism: constant technological progress
socialism: copying capitalist technology </span>
<span>The Great Compromise was necessary because had it not happened, the Constitutional Convention would have disintegrated.</span>