Most
religious groups in the Middle East didn’t accept the invention of the radio and
TV with a good heart. They were frightened by the mere fact that TVs and Radios
used wireless signals to broadcast. Most of them even termed radios and TVs as
work of the devil and wouldn’t want to associate themselves with the devil.
C. Technically, you couldn't stop people from voting based on their race, but at the time, you could put restrictions on voting. Most white men were educated, and those who weren't could read basic, common words. Black men, historically couldn't read, so literacy tests were an attempt to make it so that black people couldn't vote. Poll taxes were the same way, the white men could afford to pay the poll tax, but the black men couldn't due to their mostly low paying jobs. Lastly, if a white man couldn't read, or couldn't afford to pay the tax, they shouldn't have been allowed to vote, so in order to make it so that they could vote a "grandfather clause" was instated. This made it so that if your father had voted, you could vote. This meant that any white man could vote.
Move to the other side of the car to avoid a crash
The correct answer is D) hey opened textile mills that employed many workers.
Samuel Slater and Francis Cabot Lowell changed the early American industry in that they opened textile mills that employed many workers.
In 1813, they founded the Boston Manufacturing Company in Waltham, Massachusetts. They were wealthy businessmen that had the vision to participate in the industrial sector of the United States and opened that company that created many jobs for the American people. The company hired approximately 300 workers to produce textiles and it became one of the larges industrial plants of the country in that time.
<span>Christianity started as a small group from the backwaters of the Roman Empire and after two, three centuries go by, lo and behold that same group and its descendants have somehow taken over the Roman Empire and have become the official religion, in fact the only tolerated religion, of the Roman Empire by the end of the 4th century.
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