Answer:
Explanation:
I'm going to ask you a question. It is not a very nice one. How would you feel if you found out that your next door neighbor's son was a mass murderer?
I don't know how public opinion divided even though I was in the Unites States when it happened. Some people believed it was the tragic result of war it self.
Some were shocked: they thought of the American Soldier as a noble creature incapable of such brutality, such thoughtless and immoral murder. The truth likely lies between these two points of view. Certainly President Nixon did not think William Calley's actions warranted the death penalty and that is a very telling observation. If ever there was a political animal that could assess public opinion and act on it, that person would be Richard Nixon. I think the die was set long before My Lai.
The major significance of the battle of Dien Bien Phu is that the Vietminh defeated the french and ended the colonial rule.
<h3>What do you mean by the battle of Dien Bien Phu?</h3>
The battle of Dien Bien Phu was important because it was this battle that convinced the french to leave Vietnam in the Indochina war.
The battle of Dien Bien Phu brought an end to French colonial rule in Vietnam.
Therefore, A is the correct option.
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I believe it summarizes the main ideas of this essay
Answer:
To persuade readers about the unjust treatment of the African Americans.
Explanation:
"What to the Slaves is the Fourth of July?" is a speech given by Frederick Douglass on the occasion of July 5th, 1852 in Rochester, New York. In it, he emphasized on the American independence celebration which grips the whole nation but the African American community (slaves) did not actually have a cause for celebration. They are still chained and bounded to their initial status and have not experienced any form of freedom.
Douglass was also a former slave but earned his freedom and got an education, later becoming an abolitionist and worked for the freedom of his people. He delivered this speech during the Rochester Ladies' Anti-Slavery Society's meeting. In it, he called upon the injustice that the slaves are facing, while the nation is celebrating "its" freedom. Though the label "nation" includes each and everyone living in the country, and that that freedom is for all, the slaves are still bounded to their position and no one seems to care. His anti-slavery speech became one of the most important works for the abolitionist, including his autobiography. To him, it is ironic that America is celebrating her independence from being under the colonialist rule of Britain, a form of slavery but at the same time, still kept slaves themselves. The slavery system that was still prevalent and in practice even after the independence was what made him question the American people. The one reason/ purpose he most likely wrote this speech was to persuade the readers (audience) about the unjust treatment of the African Americans.