Answer:
C.
Explanation:
The Great Awakening refers to a number of periods of religious revival in American Christian history. Historians and theologians identify three, or sometimes four, waves of increased religious enthusiasm between the early 18th century and the late 20th century.
Answer:
Atomic Bomb question
Explanation:
Harry Truman was in charge because Franklin Roosevelt Died from a stroke in April of 1945. We dropped the first bomb on Hiroshima on August, 6, 1945 And then on August 9 1945 we dropped another bomb on Nagasaki. The reason we dropped 2 bombs instead of one is because the whole purpose of dropping the first one was to get Japan to surrender and they didn't so we dropped another one and they finally did surrender. the names of the bombs where Fat man And Little Boy.
Correct answer: Exterminating all European Jews
Context/detail:
The Holocaust was the mass extermination of Jews and other unwanteds in Germany during World War II. The Nazi Party under Adolph Hitler was in charge in Germany at the time. This was a fascist and nationalistic form of government.
Hitler and the Nazis believed in the supremacy of what they referred to as the "Aryan race" -- which was a term they used for the Germanic peoples. They believed their race was superior to "lesser races" like the Jews, blacks and others. Hitler and the Nazis mounted a campaign in Germany to promote their race over others like Jews and Roma (gypsies), etc.
They enacted what are called the Nuremberg Laws, which were passed at a Nazi rally in Nuremberg in 1935. These laws denied citizenship and other rights to Jewish persons. Examples of such laws:
- The Reich Citizenship Law ruled that only persons of proper ethnic blood were eligible to be German citizens.
- The Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour prohibited marriages or any sexual intercourse between Jews and Germans. It even went so far as to say that Jewish persons could not employ female Germans in their household who were under the age of 45 (afraid of something happening and somebody becoming pregnant.)
The Nazi campaign against Jews got even worse from there. They rounded up Jews and put them in concentration camps (which later became extermination camps). In support of their World War effort, they used Jews for forced labor in the concentration camps. They also used Jewish persons and others they deemed undesirable essentially as laboratory rats for doing unethical medical experiments on them. For example, they'd put persons in a pressure chamber to find out how high an altitude they could let their pilots fly before they'd become unconscious from the altitude and pressure. Others of their experiments were even more gruesome.
Ultimately, there was what the Nazis called "The Final Solution" (in the 1940s). Millions of Jews, along with other unwanteds, were exterminated in mass killings. The Nazis used poison gas and other means of killing in their extermination camps.
Answer:
limiting the powers of the government
Explanation:
The Federalist No. 51, 1788 advocates that the tendency of human beings to do evil has necessitated the formation of a government which would control the people in return. However, it suggests that no government should have exclusive authority over the people.
The document advocates for the separation of powers as well limiting the powers of the government because it believes that the power of the government is withdrawn from the people. Therefore, it should not be authoritative nor dictatorial. Rather it should bend towards the need and demand of the people.