The correct answer is “support for banking reform intensified”.
After the Pearl Harbor attack, the war was a major subject for the midterm elections. People were suffering because there was an industrial mobilization to convert production of civilian consumer goods to war materials. This caused a rationing program, each citizen had a limited fair share, prices control started and labor shortages concerned people.
This led to a Republican win in the midterms, the Congress controlled the home front agenda, in 1944 Congress passed new taxes to help fund the war expenses, the GI Bill to make a social reform program.
Martin Luther King's famous speech "I Have a Dream" deals with racism and segregation of people of color. He says in his speech that he wishes for a world where those things don't exist, and where every human is free and shares equal rights as everyone else, regardless of religion, gender, skin color, or sexual preferences. Hope this helps!
Answer:
A. Osama bin Laden declared that the attacks were part of a holy jihad against America.
B. A terrorist network called al-Qaeda hijacked four civilian airliners and killed over 3,000 people.
C. Saddam Hussein masterminded the plan to attack New York and Washington.
Explanation:
The attacks of September 11, 2001 (commonly referred to as 9/11 or with the 11-S or 11S numeronym) were a series of four terrorist attacks committed on the morning of Tuesday, September 11, 2001, by 19 members of the jihadist network Al Qaeda, by hijacking commercial aircraft to be hit against various targets, causing the death of 3016 people (including the 19 terrorists and the 24 disappeared) and leaving more than 6000 injured, as well as the destruction in New York of the entire complex of buildings of the World Trade Center (including the Twin Towers) and serious damage to the Pentagon building (headquarters of the Department of Defense of the United States, in the state of Virginia), an episode that would precede the war in Afghanistan and the adoption by the US government and its allies of the so-called "war on terror" policy.
Oskar Groening, at 94, is one of a shrinking pool of former Nazi leaders