Answer:
World War I, which led many to embrace strong nationalistic and anti-immigrant sympathies;
The Bolshevik Revolution in Russia, which led many to fear that immigrants, particularly from Russia, southern Europe, and eastern Europe, intended to overthrow the United States government;
The end of World War I, which caused production needs to decline and unemployment to rise. Many workers joined labor unions. Labor strikes, including the Boston Police Strike in September 1919, contributed to fears that radicals intended to spark a revolution;
Self-proclaimed anarchists' mailing bombs to prominent Americans, including United States Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer and United States Supreme Court Associate Justice (and former Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Chief Justice) Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
In the election of 1912, the candidate considered least pleasing to reformers was,
William H. Taft.
Answer: Smallpox which was contracted from Europeans and Africans, was supposed to have led to the large-scale deaths of Native Americans. Nearly 95% of the Native American population was decimated due to smallpox. It spread to other continents and caused wide-spread deaths throughout the world.
Powerful photographs depicting conditions in city slums.
Answer:
The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA or McCain-Feingold Act) was primarily designed to address two perceived problems: Increased flow of soft money through political parties, used to influence federal election campaigns. So this act banned soft money.
Explanation: