Answer:
b) "Before we were being sent out here they said that we would be able to go as far as we can, and I thought we would be able to go to Eden or Twin Falls. When we want to go to Twin Falls or Eden, we need to have a pass."
Explanation:
According to the given central idea, the detail that best supports the idea that the internment camps restricted the freedom of Japanese Americans during WWII is option B.
This is because, according to the narrator, he believed that he would be able to go as far as he wanted but when he got to Eden or Twin Falls, he found out he needed a pass.
Answer:
a: white settlers wanted to establish farms on land already set aside for Native Americans?
Explanation:
The Indian Removal Act of 1830 was a law passed by the 21st Congress of the United States to facilitate the transfer of the Amerindian tribes who lived east of the Mississippi River from the United States to lands further west. The Transfer Law, which was part of the US policy known as Indian Removal, was ratified by law by President Andrew Jackson on May 28, 1830.
The Indian Removal or Indian Removal was a policy of the United States government in the nineteenth century that sought to move the Amerindian tribes (or "Native Americans") that lived in the east of the Mississippi River to land west of the river. During the decades that followed the War of the Independence of the United States, the rapid increase of the population of the country resulted in numerous treaties in which Native American lands were purchased. Finally, the government of the United States began to encourage the Indian tribes to sell their lands by offering them lands in the west, outside the borders of the then existing states of the country, where the tribes could settle again. This process was accelerated by the passage of the Forced Transfer of the Indians Act of 1830, which provided funds to President Andrew Jackson to carry out land exchange treaties ("relocation"). It is estimated that some 100,000 Amerindians were moved west as a result of this policy, most of them emigrating during the 1830s, settling in what was known as the Indian Territory.
Answer: D
Explanation:
A capital city with its surrounding countryside and villiages
B.
Locke and Rousseau believed that monarchies were the only stable forms of government.
Answer:
In 1944, representatives of 44 nations met in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, to draw up a plan for the post-World War II economic order. Their goal was to avoid a repetition of the destructive policies that could spark another conflict. So they created the IMF to promote international monetary cooperation.
Explanation: