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mihalych1998 [28]
3 years ago
9

What did the slogan Fifty four forty or fight mean?

Social Studies
1 answer:
guapka [62]3 years ago
5 0
It was the popular slogan that led the Polk to victory.
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Which food would not have been eaten by these first people?<br> fish<br> corn<br> deer<br> berries
Neporo4naja [7]

Answer:

berries

Explanation:

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3 years ago
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A religious leader in a small city led a crusade against the local X-rated movie theaters, topless dance bars, and strip clubs,
Natasha_Volkova [10]

Answer:

reaction formation

Explanation:

Hello! The reactive formation, in the theory of Freud, is a defense mechanism that occurs when someone experiences an instinctive or, in any case, unconscious desire that he consciously rejects. This leads him to develop the impulse opposite to the one he rejects.

Thanks for your question! Feel free to ask more!

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3 years ago
The federal budget is a record of the nation’s
VARVARA [1.3K]
The answer would be : Fiscal Policy
Federal budget is used to fund Government activities such us : Welfare funding, maintaining public properties, army's funding , etc. Most of federal budget come from the taxes.
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3 years ago
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Which of the following Ideas did the Congress of Racal Equality (CORE) believe?
9966 [12]

Explanation:

Inspired by Mahatma Gandhi's protest strategies of nonviolence and civil disobedience, in 1942 a group of Black and white students in Chicago founded the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), helping to launch one of America’s most important civil rights movements.

Taking a leading role in sit-ins, picket lines, the Montgomery Bus Boycott, Freedom Rides and the 1963 March on Washington, the group worked alongside Martin Luther King, Jr. and other civil rights leaders throughout the 1950s and mid-1960s until, in 1966, under new guidance, it turned its focus from civil disobedience to becoming a Black separatist and Black Power organization.

CORE's Founding Principles

Founded by activists associated with the Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR), an interfaith pacifist organization, the group was influenced greatly by the teachings of Gandhi and, in the early 1940s, worked to integrate Chicago restaurants and businesses using sit-ins and other nonviolent actions, according to the Martin Luther King Jr. Research and Education Institute at Stanford University.

CORE’s 1947 Journey of Reconciliation, an integrated, multi-state bus ride through the upper South, “was met with minimal violence, although several of the riders were arrested, and two were sentenced to work on a chain gang in North Carolina,” the institute writes.

A pillar of CORE's principles was a strict devotion to interracial membership, historian Brian Purnell writes in his book Fighting Jim Crow in the County of Kings. “CORE hoped to create an interracial, nonviolent army that would end racial segregation in America with campaigns that employed what Gandhi called satyagraha, which translates as 'soul force' or 'truth force.' CORE founders believed that local chapters' public displays of interracial solidarity and disciplined use of nonviolence would transform America into a truly colorblind democratic society."

In its first few years, according to Purnell, local CORE chapters were formed in 19 cities, including Baltimore, Chicago, Columbus, Cleveland,Denver, Detroit, Los Angeles and New York, although many didn’t last long.

“Their victories were often limited in scope,” he writes. “CORE chapters might successfully desegregate a downtown roller-skating rink or open up housing for a handful of Black people, but the process CORE chapters had to follow was prolonged and laborious."

By the end of 1954, many CORE chapters were disbanded, but, according to the Chicago Public Library, the organization found new dedication following the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision made that same year. “CORE decided to channel the majority of its energies on the South,” the library notes, supporting sit-ins and sending field secretaries to advise activists on nonviolent protest methods.

8 0
3 years ago
What did the Egyptians do that showed they believed in the afterlife?
dsp73

Answer: the ancient Egyptians believed that life on earth was only one part of an eternal journey which ended, not in death, but in everlasting joy. When one's body failed, the soul did not die with it but continued on toward an afterlife where one received back all that one had thought lost.

Explanation: big brain

5 0
3 years ago
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