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givi [52]
4 years ago
6

What do you think jrotc will be like in 100 years from now

History
1 answer:
Ipatiy [6.2K]4 years ago
5 0
More high skilled training and better opportunities what you want to do. 
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If an animal or human develops its muscles or injures itself, these traits can be inherited by its offspring.
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False, because when the animal injures itself it is not part of the DNA so when the animal reproduces the trait is not passed down.  But the offspring can develop the same muscles or injuries as the animal did. 
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4 years ago
11. How was The Odyssey originally transmitted from one generation to the next?​
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3 years ago
How did war affect African Americans
Zigmanuir [339]

Answer:

Explanation:

World War I was a transformative moment in African-American history. What began as a seemingly distant European conflict soon became an event with revolutionary implications for the social, economic, and political future of black people. The war directly impacted all African Americans, male and female, northerner and southerner, soldier and civilian. Migration, military service, racial violence, and political protest combined to make the war years one of the most dynamic periods of the African-American experience. Black people contested the boundaries of American democracy, demanded their rights as American citizens, and asserted their very humanity in ways both subtle and dramatic. Recognizing the significance of World War I is essential to developing a full understanding of modern African-American history and the struggle for black freedom.

When war erupted in Europe in August 1914, most Americans, African Americans included, saw no reason for the United States to become involved. This sentiment strengthened as war between the German-led Central Powers and the Allied nations of France, Great Britain, and Russia ground to a stalemate and the death toll increased dramatically. The black press sided with France, because of its purported commitment to racial equality, and chronicled the exploits of colonial African soldiers serving in the French army. Nevertheless, African Americans viewed the bloodshed and destruction occurring overseas as far removed from the immediacies of their everyday lives.

The war did, however, have a significant impact on African Americans, particularly the majority who lived in the South. The war years coincided with the Great Migration, one of the largest internal movements of people in American history.

Between 1914 and 1920, roughly 500,000 black southerners packed their bags and headed to the North, fundamentally transforming the social, cultural, and political landscape of cities such as Chicago, New York, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and Detroit. The Great Migration would reshape black America and the nation as a whole.

Black southerners faced a host of social, economic, and political challenges that prompted their migration to the North. The majority of black farmers labored as sharecroppers, remained in perpetual debt, and lived in dire poverty. Their condition worsened in 1915–16 as a result of a boll weevil infestation that ruined cotton crops throughout the South. These economic obstacles were made worse by social and political oppression. By the time of the war, most black people had been disfranchised, effectively stripped of their right to vote through both legal and extralegal means.

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4 years ago
During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, U.S. foreign policy was closely tied to domestic economic concerns. The annexatio
IceJOKER [234]
I just need the pionts
6 0
3 years ago
N: What consequences should there be for the countries who start and lose a war
IRISSAK [1]
1. lose what they fought for
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