Answer:
Explanation:
Furthermore, the people of this country are distant from the troubled areas of the earth and it is hard for them to comprehend the plight and consequent reactions of the long-suffering peoples and the effect of those reactions on their governments in connection with our efforts to promote peace in the world.
This is big in history and you'll want to remember this
the enlightenment ideas got people thinking on their own, am i right?
it promoted individualism and independence. these are the foundations of a democracy...
the enlightenment encouraged people to speak up and share ideas and go against the church and state.
it influenced democracy because people we able to voice their opinions reguardless (for the most part) of social status.
A I'm pretty sure or c but I think a
Eastern Bloc try this for the answer
In the CCC ( Civilian Conservation Corps), Roosevelt's position on the role of African Americans was:
D. He disagreed with Harold Ickes about their ability to take on supervisory roles.
The main goal of the programme was to conserve the country’s natural resources while providing jobs for young men. African American men played a major role in the CCC in North Carolina.
The law establishing the CCC contained a provision that “no discrimination shall be made on account of race, color or creed.” Yet despite instructions, CCC administrators in many states refused to select a proportionate share of blacks. By 1935, African American participation in the CCC did reach 10%.
In addition to the imbalance of labor opportunities, few African-American could climb the ranks within the CCC's administrative hierarchy. In a letter , Ickes rejects the CCC director's low opinion of African-Americans in supervisory positions:
"<em>I have your letter of September 24 in which you express doubt as to the advisability of appointing Negro supervisory personnel in Negro CCC camps. For my part, I am quite certain that Negroes can function in supervisory capacities just as efficiently as can white men and I do not think that they should be discriminated against merely on account of their color. I can see no menace to the program that you are so efficiently carrying out in giving just and proper recognition to members of the Negro race."</em>
Although Ickes supported the initiative, the placement of African-Americans in administrative positions gained little traction.