Answer:
The Olmec Leave Their MarkThe Olmec contributed much to later Mesoamerican civilizations. They influenced the powerful Maya, who will be dis-cussed in Chapter 16. Olmec art styles,
Explanation:
The correct option is:
B. Slavery soon became less important in the Americas and most slaves were freed.
Slavery was strongly laced with the national economy and vigorously defended by white Southerners, who were profiting from enslaved labor. By the 19th century, abolitionism, a campaign to end slavery, gained strength as many abolitionist, most of them in the North, worked tirelessly to promote awareness about the evils of slavery, and to raise support for abolition.
Answer: Homosexuals, the disabled, gypsies, Jehovah’s Witnesses.
Explanation:
These kinds of groups were considered by Nazis as the groups as a socio-racial problem so they didn't want any of them in their nation.
Thousand of gypsies (Sinti and Roma) were sent to concentration camps.
Those who were mentally and physically disabled are also being targeted because the Nazis always wanted powerful and healthy people.
Homosexuals were targeted because they were considering as someones who was stoping the population growth.
Jehovah’s Witnesses were considered by Nazis as easily judged groups of people and that they would be a problem because of that.
The Gestapo (Secret State Police) is the symbol and main instrument of terror in the Third Reich. The Gestapo with particular cruelty persecuted and destroyed all those whom the Nazis considered their opponents: communists and social democrats, Jews and homosexuals, people who dared to doubt the invincibility of German weapons, those who listened to “enemy radio stations” and told political jokes.
Along with the fact that the Jews were classified by the Nazis as a priority “enemy,” the Nazi ideological racial concept aimed at the persecution, imprisonment and extermination of other groups of the population, including Roma, people with mental and physical disabilities, Poles, Soviet prisoners of war and Afro-Germans. The Nazis also declared enemies and threats to the security political dissidents, Jehovah's Witnesses, homosexuals, and so-called asocial personalities because they deliberately opposed the Nazi regime or because some aspects of their behavior did not fit into the Nazi understanding of social norms. Nazi sought to eliminate the dissenters in their own country and the so-called racial threats through constant internal cleansing of German society.