Theodore Roosevelt was the New York politician who accused a reporter of being a muckraker during Harlem Renaissance. This term was coined by Roosevelt himself, for the journalists who were reform-minded and attached established institutions as corrupt.
<span>The Enlightenment was important America because it provided the philosophical basis of the American Revolution. The Revolution was more than just a protest against English authority; as it turned out, the American Revolution provided a blueprint for the organization of a democratic society. And while imperfectly done, for it did not address the terrible problem of slavery, the American Revolution was an enlightened concept of government whose most profound documents may have been the American Declaration of Independence and United States Constitution. To feel the full impact of the Enlightenment on America one needs only to look at the first inaugural address of Thomas Jefferson, who, along with Benjamin Franklin, is considered to be the American most touched by the ideas of the Enlightenment.
Jefferson wrote: If there be any among us who would wish to dissolve this Union or to change its republican form, let them stand undisturbed as monuments of the safety with which error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it.
While the locus of the Enlightenment thinking is generally considered to have been the salons in Paris and Berlin, the practical application of those ideas was carried out most vividly in the American colonies. (http://www.academicamerican.com/colonial/topics/enlighten.htm)
The Great Awakening
A complete dissolving of the theocracy occurred. The establishment in Virginia and North Carolina began to fall apart. Ministers could no longer control the direction of religious life. It had been democratized and made accessible by people.
One of the major results of the Great Awakening was to unify 4/5ths of Americans in a common understanding of the Christian faith and life. Americans--North and South--shared a common evangelical view of life.
(http://www.wfu.edu/~matthetl/perspectives/four.html)
In other words, the great awakening began to break down barriers in the colonies that allowed them to have greater inner-colony relations.</span>
B and c because usually those assassinations were broadcasted to the audiences
The rights of the English citizens were strengthened in the following ways:
1. In the year 1215, the Magna Carta, was written by King John. In this document, he stated that the king and members of the throne were under the same laws as the citizens.
- That is they were not above the British law. They were to follow the same laws as the citizens.
2. In the year 1265, the British house of parliament was formed to see to the creation of laws in the country.
3. In 1689, the English Bill of rights was created by the parliament. The bill established several rights for citizens.
- The right established that the people could not be taxed without consent from the parliament
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