Answer:
Prime minister Hideki Tojo
Explanation:
Answer:
The administration of John F. Kennedy
Explanation:
John Lewis was the<em> head</em> of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Becoming a chairman of the organization was also brought by his experienced of being mobbed by a white man when he was younger. In order to address racial discrimination and his full support of the Civil Rights bill, he made a speech which was addressed to the administration of John F. Kennedy <em>(the President of that time).</em> The speech was delivered during the "March on Washington."
Some revisions were made before he could deliver it because it sounded too inflammatory.
Thus, this explains the answer.
The <em>redeemers</em> were a political coalition in the Southern states during the Reconstruction Era after the Civil War. During this time, the south was occupied by federal forces, and their governments dominated by Republicans, who tried to guarantee the new civil rights obtained by black people. This was very unpopular for Southerners, who refused to lose their power to black people. So they employed violent measures to prevent them from participating in politics, attacking them and other republicans. The most infamous example of these paramilitary organizations is the Ku Klux Klan, other less known are the White League in Louisiana and the Red Shirts in Mississippi and North Carolina.
So, the strategy they used is violence and threats to undermine the Republican vote. They finally succeeded with the Compromise of 1877, when Hayes became president with the votes of the south in exchange for favors to them, such as the removal of federal forces. This led to the end of the Reconstruction.
As with any system, there will be an expansion of a population that is only halted by the mechanisms of the system being overly stressed and unable to maintain a population over a certain level or threshold. It is natural to fight for resources in a given system. The European population settled and increased, more resources were needed, land, water, food and supplies. The Europeans fought to maintain and increase the people with whom they associated. And unfortunately a prevalent thought at the time, was the Indians were a "savage other", whose lives were not as valuable and so the Europeans eventually destroyed them.