It is A- they cannot guarantee security and fairness
Answer: Africans were forbidden from buying or leasing land outside those reserves. Europeans, likewise, were unable to buy or lease land from Africans.
Explanation:
In his book, A People's History of the United States, Howard Zinn cites examples from US colonial history of the gap between rich and poor in colonial life.
A key study cited by Zinn examined tax registers from Boston, showing that the top 1% of the population held 25% of the wealth in 1687, and that by 1770, the top 1% of property owners in Boston owned 44% of the wealth. The study also noted that the bulk of Boston's population were not property owners. The percentage of adult males in Boston who owned no property doubled between 1687 and 1770 (from 14% to 29%).
Zinn cited additional items, regarding overcrowding of poorhouses (giving a notable example from New York) and a general increase throughout the colonies of the "wandering poor" who had no real means of support. He also cited examples of workers' strikes against employers in the colonies because of low wages.
Banned worked from important industries from striking as then products for the war could not be made.
Lyndon B. Johnson's "Great Society" is very similar to FDR's "New Deal."
Both of these policies were aimed at helping American citizens by having more government intervention in everyday life. For example, FDR created several new federal agencies that still exist today to help citizens. This includes the Social Security Administration and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The Social Security Administration helps to provide financial assistance to elderly citizens while the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation helps to protect an individuals savings in banks that are licensed by the FDIC.
Lyndon B. Johnson also has lasting programs that help American citizens. Two of the most famous ones are Medicare and Medicaid. These help to cover medical costs for elderly American citizens and individuals who live below the poverty line.