Answer:
Similarities between the Know-Nothing Party and the Response to the Red Scare of 1919
1) Both called for equal rights for women and African Americans:
b. False
2) Both sought to limit immigration to the United States:
a. True
3) Both supported the overseas expansion of the United States:
b. False
4) Both attempted to limit the influence of big business on American politics:
b. False
Explanation:
The Know-Nothing Party in the 1850's was a clandestine nativist organization that later formed the American Party. This political party, according to britannica.com, "called for restrictions on immigration, the exclusion of the foreign-born from voting or holding public office in the United States, and for a 21-year residency requirement for citizenship."
On the other hand, the response to the Red Scare of 1919, the first Red Scare described the fear of communism and anarchism during the cold war between Russia and the United States. In the response to the Red Scare of 1919, there were calls for immigration restrictions and purging of the Russian Communist influence in the United States.
Conclusively, both sought to limit immigration to the United States.
The three nations that were allies of the United States in the war with Japan were "Britain France and China," since Japan was an ally of Nazi Germany, which stood at the center of the Axis powers during World War II.
The term "Bourbon Democrats" was never used by the Bourbon Democrats themselves. It was not the name of any specific or formal group and no one running for office ever ran on a Bourbon Democrat ticket. The term "Bourbon" was mostly used disparagingly by critics complaining of viewpoints they saw as old-fashioned.[4] A number of splinter Democratic parties, such as the Straight-Out Democratic Party (1872) and the National Democratic Party (1896), that actually ran candidates, fall under the more general label of Bourbon Democrats.
A. Is the answer so A. Demographics