The correct answer is D) Russia must stop fighting in World War l to end the death and starvation the war has brought.
The other options of the question were A) The czarist system is a Russian tradition that should be reformed but not eliminated. B) Russia should do whatever is necessary to make its government resemble Great Britain's. C) There is never any justification for protesters to use violence to achieve their political aims
A supporter of the Bolsheviks would most likely agree with the following statement: "Russia must stop fighting in World War l to end the death and starvation the war has brought."
In Russia, in the 1920s, the Bolsheviks were the political party that supported the ideas of Karl Marx and were convinced that the proletarian or the people should free themselves from the oppression of the wealthy people. Their political rivals were the Mensheviks. And yes, the Bolsheviks would definitely oppose the participation of Russia in World War 1 for all the damage, pain, and poverty that it caused to Russian people.
The correct answer is slavery
Slavery, is the social practice in which a human being acquires property rights over another called a slave, to whom this condition is imposed by force.
In some societies, since the most distant times, slaves were legitimately defined as a product. Prices changed according to physical conditions, professional skills, sex, age, origin and destination.
When we speak of slavery, it is difficult not to think of the Europeans who overcrowded the holds of their ships of men brought from Africa regardless of their wills and who were put up for sale in an inhuman and cruel manner throughout America.
This passage is about the speech of President Jackson in Congress, where he defended the process of remorse of the Indians.
The use of the word "progessive" refers to the continuation of a process begun earlier, where the Indians were massacred and expelled from their territories to the detriment of the white man's civilization. The former president used that term as a way to slow down an attitude that today would be understood as barbarism, but one that is part of US history.