<span>congress must establish a concrete connection betweeb a law's provision and interstate commerce before superseding policies that traditionally fall under state jurisdiction</span>
Answer:
1. It Created Ethnic Diversity
2. It Facilitated Industry
3. It inspired Conflict
4. It Built America
Explanation:
1. 1870s and 1880s immigration was northern European, Ireland, England and Germany. Then came eastern and southern Europeans in Scandinavians, and Asians. Neighborhoods in places like NYC were dedicated to their own ethic groups, an example is "Little Italy".
2. This helped create a lot of simplified tasks for unskilled workers instead of skilled worker who were payed much more. 2/3rds of workers in Chicago were then Immigrants. This made some groups go into specific industries. For example, Jews went into the Garment Industry most of the time.
3. Society was conflicted on the arrival of Immigrants at the time. Low wages and unemployment was blamed on Immigrants, as well as the cause of poverty and crime. Laws were passed like the 1882 Chinese Exclusion act, and the 1894 Immigration Restriction League.
4. Closer to 50% of Immigrants actually only came to the US for economic reasons and went here to gain easy money and they went back to their home country. Around 30-50% of Italian immigrants actually went back to Italy after only 5 years. Many still became part of American society, and now millions of people can trace back their roots to Immigrant Groups.
To protecting Germany from attacks by Russia
Help because it helped it let different places in the world get the items they needed
The real midnight rider wasn't Paul Revere it was actually 25-year-old
mail carrier named Israel Bissel. He rode some 400 miles in 5 days. He
alerted local militias that a British Force was marching on Lexington
& Concord.
Another rider was a 16-year-old girl named Sibyl
Ludington, who rode more than 40 miles in 6 hours and called out any
army of patriots to halt a British advance at Danbury, Connecticut. Paul
Revere's mission was to warn rebel leader Samuel Adams and John Hancock
that British soldiers were on the way to arrest them. Paul Revere never
saw the signal and he wasn;t the only midnight rider.