Energy.
The Second Industrial Revolution<span>, also known as the </span>Technological Revolution,<span>was a phase of rapid industrialization in the final third of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th. The First </span>Industrial Revolution<span>, which ended in the early-mid 1800s, was punctuated by a slowdown in macroinventions before the Second Industrial Revolution in 1870.</span>
The Second New Deal<span>—the legislation that Roosevelt and Congress passed between 1935 and 1938—was strikingly different from the </span>First New Deal<span> in certain ways. Perhaps most important, the </span>Second New Deal<span> legislation relied more heavily on the Keynesian style of deficit spending than the </span>First New Deal did<span>.</span>
<span>Radicals wanted to make sure that those in rebellion would not try anything so they tried to push them away from what they did not want any changes made where Lincoln and Johnson wanted the southern states to rise to power quickly.</span>
They were all barriers for the colonial period