In Ian Haney Lopez "Dog whistle politics", the author intends to rpove that normal, common, good people are the majority of the racist. Although there are sadistic racists driven by hatred, the reason of racism still largely exists is because good people can also be racist. "Even the farmer who killed another human being for the petty act of poaching, I came to understand, was not a homicidal lunatic but a complex person capable of both brutal violence and real generosity".
By "strategic individuals adapt race" he means this, that common people perform everyday acts of racism that are not overlook by law because it adapts itself away from what the law has established.
Answer:
Critics saw Roosevelt's judicial reform bill as a bill that would give the Federal government more power to control and influence the decisions of the Supreme Court which is a federal judiciary making power more concentrated in the executive branch of the government.
Explanation:
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was the president of the United States of America in the 1930s and he served more than two terms in office.
President Franklin Roosevelt proposed a judicial reform bill after he thought his programs would be rejected with the bill aim in giving him the power to appoint his own preferred additional Supreme Court justices.
Answer: A. Both poems suggest a form of life after death that should not be feared.
Explanation:
In the poem<em> 'Song of myself'</em> , from Whitman's collection <em>Leaves of Grass</em>, Whitman describes death as a new beginning, a return to life. In the poem, he states that “…to die is different from what any one supposed, and / luckier.” He suggests that people should not be afraid of death.
In<em> 'Because I Could Not Stop for Death'</em>, Emily Dickinson presents death as a spiritual rebirth. She describes her journey from life to afterlife, accompanied by Death. Death is personified in this poem and is not intimidating at all. He is a very generous guide and makes her journey a rather pleasing experience.
Both the authors support the same idea - that death should not be feared, as it leads to nothing but a life after death.
Answer: She is worried about the well-being of her son among an angry group
Explanation:
Sally's point of view told by the excerpt is that "she is worried about the well-being of her son among an angry group".
This can be deduced when she spoke in a whisper, after she noticed how angry and antagonised the crowd was when she told her son not to speak the way he was speaking.