Some ways that Southerners made life difficult for freed African Americans was by enacting poll taxes and literacy tests.
Southerners were still very against African Americans having rights, but since slavery was now illegal, they decided to come up with other ways to make their lives difficult. One of their main concerns was African Americans being able to vote, as this meant that they could vote for someone in power that could better their lives.
One of the things that Southerners would do to make freed African Americans' lives difficult was putting taxes on polls. Poll taxes meant that in order to vote or poll, you needed to pay a tax. African Americans were still trying to find jobs, as a lot of the time in the South, people were against hiring them. If they did find a job, they would get paid less. This often meant that they did not have the money to vote.
Another way that Southerners would make freed African Americans' lives difficult was by putting literacy tests on polls. Literacy tests meant that in order to vote or poll, you had to pass a literacy test. Freed African Americans usually could not read or write, as it was illegal to give a slave an education. Even after they got freed, they often would not have the time or money to receive an education. This would cause African Americans to fail the literacy tests and not be able to vote.
Answer:
One of Hamilton's unpopular ideas was to repay the national debt.
Explanation:
From farmers to Madison and half of Washington's cabinet, the opinion was that such a move would take too much money from the ordinary person and put too much money in the pockets of the East coast financiers who would then have amplified power while being the only ones to benefit. Another unpopular action was the chartering of a national bank. Today, repayment of national debt (or attempts thereat) and the function of a national bank (The Federal Reserve) are bedrock financial policy, realities that mitigate previous historical opinion of Hamilton.
The answer to choose: A) Carter was instrumental in negotiating the Camp David Accords, which directly led to the 1979 Egypt-Israeli Peace Treaty.
Details:
Thanks to the persistent efforts of President Carter in working with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, those two leaers signed the Camp David Accords in September, 1978. That led to the 1979 peace treaty between Egypt and Israel that has lasted to the present day. Sadat and Begin were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1978 for their efforts in reaching the agreement that they made.
As to the other answers:
The fact that Carter allowed the deposed shah of Iran to come into the USA for medical treatment did provoke the hostage seizure in Tehran. However, that was not a major <u>success</u> of Carter's foreign policy, but a major mistake. (His advisors had tried to tell him in advance that letting the shah come into the US was a bad idea.)
Similarly, the increase of tensions with the Soviet Union over the Olympics would not be an example of a success.
The federal law regarding cleaning up hazardous waste would be a success item, but one of <u>domestic</u> policy, not foreign policy.
It could be either A or C but honestly i am not positive on either one of those answers. 3>
Ottoman empire and austro-hungarian empire. both split after the war forming some new countires.