Nazis built extermination camps equipped with huge gas chambers that could kill as many as 6000 human beings in a day. Those labeled as weak would die. They were told to undress for a shower and then led into a chamber with fake shower heads. After the doors were closed, cyanide gas poured from the shower heads. All inside were killed in a matter of minutes.
Answer:
The answer is: Chief Joseph believed that Native American tribes had a right to sovereignty, while Commissioner Parker believed that Native American tribes were not sovereign nations.
Explanation:
Chief Joseph was the leader of an indigenous group of people called <em>"Wal-lam-wat-kain," </em>a Native American tribe.
Commissioner Ely S. Parker was a lieutenant of the American Civil War. He became the Commissioner of Indian Affairs which meant that he was responsible for managing the lands that was entrusted by the USA to the <em>Indian tribes, Alaska Natives and American Indians.</em>
The difference between Chief Joseph's and Commissioner Parker's arguments was that <u>the Chief believed that Native American tribes had a right to sovereignty,</u> while <u>Commissioner Parker believed that Native American tribes were not sovereign nations.</u>
For Parker, none of the tribes could guarantee them of a governance whereby people would obey the law. For him, it was a great deal of harm that the government of the USA allowed the Indians to believe that they were sovereign or independent nation. Because of this, Chief Joseph resisted the Americans when they negotiated with them to relocate to a reservation.
Black codes attempted to restrict freedom and get African Americans into labor because of their low wages and/or debt. Jim Crow Laws were racial segregation laws. Plessy v. Ferguson is a Supreme Court case that racially segregated public places
<span>The terrorist responsible for the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing were from Libya. Many speculated that the attack had been retaliation for a 1986 U.S. bombing campaign against Libya’s capital city, Tripoli. Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi was convicted of the bombing, while Lamin Khalifa Fhimah was acquitted.</span>
They were warning the town that the British were coming to attack.