<span>Despite being freed from slavery about 80 years before the end of World War II, African-Americans were still treated - often at best - as second class citizens in the southern states and discrimination was common in varying forms almost everywhere in the south (and, to a measure, in the northern states as well). While social change for African-Americans and other minorities came along rather slowly, it did eventually come (at least in part). President Truman famously - and quite forcefully and progressively for the time in the late 1940s - noted that "if the United States were to offer the peoples of the world a choice of freedom or enslavement it must correct the remaining imperfections in our practice of democracy." Beginning in the early 1950s states in both the north and the south established fair employment commissions, passed laws banning discrimination, and minority voter registrations began to rise throughout the country. In 1954, the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education paved the way for desegregation in all public schools. In the mid 1960s, President Johnson not only disliked injustice, he understood the international repercussions that came along with America’s perceived hypocrisy. In turn, he helped to pass The Civil Rights Act of 1964 that banned all forms of discrimination in public and a majority of private accommodations.</span>
"<span>a. Johnson's behavior and use of the veto prevented Republicans from getting their bills passed without Southern Democrats supporting them" is the best option, since Johnson sympathized with the South and was opposed to many aspects of Reconstruction.</span>
Answer:
After susch a war people around the woerld decided it would be nce if they could talk and be social without points sabers and muskets at each other henceforth they came together to form The Unnnited Nations
Explanation:
Answer:
King Carlos III appointed Rubí inspector of frontier presidios on August 7 of the following year and commissioned him to address economic inequalities and other urgent matters. Rubí went to Mexico City in mid-December 1765 when informed of his commission, and remained in the capital until March 1766, when he obtained his orders from Viceroy Cruillas. Rubí set out for his inspection on March 12 Rubí set out for his examination on 12 March, traveling first to Querétaro, then to Zacatecas. On April 14, Nicolás de Lafora, his engineer and mapmaker, accompanied him in Durango, keeping a diary of the trip, as did Rubí himself. A copy of Rubí's previously unpublished journal was uncovered in 1989, when it was contained in a volume of bound documents collected by the Barker Texas History Centre.
https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/rubi-marques-de
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