Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, <span>the correct response would be the one having to do with "revising the will of the past," since activist justices take a stronger role in upending previous decisions. </span>
Answer:
so your answer is both were the bloodiest battles.
Explanation:
Well we know Atlanta was the bloodiest battle of the Civil War.
Lyndon Johnson and his push for civil rights for African Americans.
Johnson continued the push for civil rights that had been started by President John F. Kennedy. In the emotional days after JFK's assassination, President Johnson said in an address to Congress: "<span>No memorial oration or eulogy could more eloquently honor President Kennedy's memory than the earliest possible passage of the civil rights bill for which he fought so long." The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was passed within months after the Kennedy assassination. The act outlawed discrimination in public places and in employment practices, and provided for integration of public schools.
Incidentally, in defense of Gerald Ford and his fight against high unemployment -- by the end of Ford's term in office, the unemployment rate had begun to improve. But it was too little, too late, and his reelection bid failed. (Voters also were reacting against the Republican administration due to the Nixon Watergate scandal.)</span>
The end of the Vietnam war created the crisis of confidence because the nation did not trust the government for not pushing them into unwanted conflicts.
Explanation:
The end of the Vietnam war created the crisis of confidence that had not been there for the whole existence of US as till then the people had barely ever been against the nation when it went to war.
The world wars were entered with public consent and wide public support.
The Vietnam conflict was not explainable to public so they began losing their trust because the nation did not trust the government to make the right decisions for them anymore.