Answer:In the three weeks since George Floyd’s death, public opinion on race and policing has zoomed left. Support for Black Lives Matter is skyrocketing. Almost 60 percent of Americans think police are more likely to use excessive force on an African American suspect than a white suspect — a sea change from 2016, when only 34 percent of registered voters said the same. And an overwhelming majority of Americans now say they support a wide variety of police reforms, even if polling suggests that “defend the police” is still a radioactive slogan.
Explanation: Credits: The Washington Post; Public opinion on policing has shifted.
Answer:
See explanation for answers
Explanation:
(they're not in any order in this list)
Tea act: A tax on tea; angered the colonists
Stamp act: Colonists would have to purchase a "stamp" to place on public documents i.e newspapers, playing cards, almanacs, etc.
Intolerable acts: a series of laws passed by the British Government that restricted the colonist's freedoms. They were passed in response to the Boston Tea Party.
Sugar Act: A tax on sugar, this upset the colonists because they felt that the taxes were unfair, as they lacked representation in congress.
Proclamation of 1763: Prevented colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains, a desire for better farmland led many colonists to defy this act.
Answer: There was a significant disillusion towards being able to assist Europeans and other nations in fighting off significant threats. At the same time, postwar disillusion in Europe resulted in a general rejection of the institutions and ideologies that plunged the continent into the worst of all wars.
Answer: In central Africa, the spread of Bantu-speaking people had effects on the environment. Introducing new crops and farming techniques altered the natural landscape. Raising cattle also displaced wild animal species.
Explanation: khan academy
Answer:
The correct option here is option C.
Explanation:
While Kennedy was president he was met with the fierce resistance in Congress on many of his policies that he wanted to pass as the Congress was then in the Republican majority who opposed Civil Rights. It was only after the presidents death that President Johnson had enough public support to push the bill pass the Congress and make it into law.