The Constitution had six different goals<span>. Even though they may have had six </span>goals<span>, their main idea was to create a single, united nation.</span>
Answer:
Soviet Expansion into Eastern Europe 1945
Communist victory in China 1949
1950s McCarthyism
Korean War 1950-53
Domino Theory
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
This question is missing something important. The part that is missing I am going to include it in capital letters.
Identify domestic events that prompted ATTACKS ON civil liberties such as the Red Scare, Palmer Raids, Fundamentalism, Marcus Garvey Back to Africa Movement, and the KKK to those attacks.
Once clarified this issue, we can say the following.
I am going to choose the case of the Red Scare and the Palm Raids. The domestic events that prompted attacks on civil liberties in the United States in the times of the First Red Scare were the following.
The country lived in uncertain years in which the threat of the spread of Communism and Anarchism really affected the federal government and scare the American society because the government released propaganda campaigns saying that Communism was the worst thing that could ever happen in the United States.
Anyone could accuse you of being Communists or anarchists, and that was enough to be persecuted by the Police.
The Palmer raids started in November 1919 and ended in January 1920. President Woodrow Wilson had ordered to cease civil liberties to people accused of being communist or anarchists. So the Department of Justice arrested many people under the suspect of being those things. Many European immigrants, basically Italian, were arrested just under suspect, not because there was evidence of their conduct.
These were the times of the First Red Scare.
Answer:
The Dred Scott decision was the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling on March 6, 1857, that having lived in a free state and territory did not entitle an slaved person, Dred Scott, to his freedom. In essence, the decision argued that, as someone's property, Scott was not a citizen and could not sue in a federal court. The majority opinion by Chief Justice Roger B. Taney also stated that Congress had no power to exclude slavery from the territories (thus invalidating the Missouri Compromise [1820]) and that African Americans could never become U.S. citizens.
Explanation: