Answer:
The answer is d. All of the above.
Explanation:
Groups of Indians - villages or towns headed by a cacique or chief - were given to a Spanish landlord to work for him in his lands or properties. They also had to pay tributes to him. He was responsible for them. That was the system called "encomienda." Ironically, one the lord´s duties was to make them assimilate Christian beliefs and values, to lead a Christian life, but often they had too work too long and too much and there wasn´t time for cathecism left. Indians and their families were exploited and badly mistreated by the Spanish lords or "encomenderos." This sytem consolidated the state of Indians as a slave labor force and their subjugation, and it also was a good method used by the Spanish crown to pay all those Spanish men who had rendered services to it. Catholic priests and missionaries were among the early defenders of Indians.
Answer:
ok so I kinda got a little confused I can tell you that Americans planted Victory Gardens in which they grew their own food... These were issued ration stamps that were used to buy their allotment of everything from meat sugar fat butter vegetables and fruit to gas tires clothing and fuel oil
Answer:
Protestors Take Over Lincoln Park
In July 1968, MOBE and yippie activists applied for permits to camp at Lincoln Park and hold rallies at the International Amphitheatre, Soldier Field and Grant Park. Hoping to dilute the protestors’ momentum, Mayor Daley approved only one permit to protest at the bandshell at Grant Park.
About a week before the convention, despite not having permission, thousands of protestors—many of them from out of state and from middle-class families—set up camp at Lincoln Park, about ten miles from the Amphitheatre. Expecting resistance, protest leaders organized self-defense training sessions including karate and snake dancing.
In the meantime, Democratic Party delegates began arriving in a Chicago that was rapidly approaching a state of siege: National Guardsmen and policemen met their planes. Their hotels were under heavy guard and the convention Amphitheatre was a virtual fortress.
Answer:
In Washington's Farewell Address, he urged the nation to avoid forming political parties, avoid creating strong political bonds with foreign countries, and to build trading relationships with other countries.
Explanation:
On July 4, 1776, the United States declared its independence. George Washington, commander in chief of the revolutionary Continental Army in the American War of Independence, was the main architect of the construction of the democratic foundations of the new nation and was soon anointed as the country's first president. At the end of his term, in September 1796, Washington gave the people of the United States a farewell address with recommendations and warnings for their fellow citizens.
The Washington Farewell Speech was an introduction to republican virtue and a severe warning against partisanship, sectoralization and participation in wars abroad, issues that today are not largely respected by the country's politicians.