#1) In this quotation, Du Bois disagrees with Booker T. Washington’s accommodationist approach because Du Bois is expressing that
Answer: Du Bois did not think blacks should submit to discrimination while patiently working for equality but should firmly oppose it. He argued that social change could be accomplished by developing the small group of college-educated blacks he called "the Talented Tenth". Booker T. Washington urged blacks to accept discrimination for the time being and concentrate on elevating themselves through hard work and material prosperity. He believed in education in the crafts, industrial and farming skills and the cultivation of the virtues of patience, enterprise and thrift.
Answer:
Rival ethnic groups forced to live together causing conflicts and wars. Lost many resources without equal return. ... Africans were forced to work on plantations and in mines for very little money.
Answer:
A is the only logical answer
Answer:
<h2>North</h2><h3> Strength </h3>
- The North had an enormous industrial advantage
- the North manufactured 97 percent of the country's firearms
Weakness
- . They did not know the land the other side were fighting on the defensive in its own territory and were familiar with the landscape
<h2>
South</h2>
Weakness
- At the beginning of the war, the Confederacy had only one-ninth the industrial capacity of the Union.
- There was not even one rifle works in the entire South
<h3> Strength</h3>
- The South could produce all the food it needed
- The South also had a great nucleus of TRAINED OFFICERS. Seven of the eight military colleges in the country were in the South.
Answer:
They were not industrialized they did not have their own factory, they could not have the entire crop to manufacturing to products, they struggled with stability and they needed other countries to help them.