Answer: to make sure that all culture followed state ideology
Explanation:
Totalitarian governments maintain their power by strictly controlling all life flows. Culture and art are not exempt from this influence. Art can be a very effective mechanism through which power can be criticized, so totalitarian regimes need to control artists and their actions. Many artists and scientists have perished throughout history in their states only because the dictators in power did not like their actions and work.
Answer:
Explanation:
I think you really ought to become familiar with the civil rights movement, particularly if you are an American. The issue in the 60s began as an issue that centered around voting.
Let's start with the fact that in the 60s, there was no such thing as on line. Let's also begin by saying that in the 60s, when the colored went to register, they were asked "qualifying questions" that no one knew the answer to, probably not even the person asking them. Things like if you lived in Alabama you might be asked how many counties there were and what are they.
Think of why people might withhold the vote. The colored in many counties outnumbered the whites. They could elect sheriffs council members, judges, and any other elected official.
There are enough problems with voting without adding the need to see who was casting the ballot. Think of what can be done. You can set up an email address for six people and let all six vote.
Voting is a hard fought for right. People have died for it. It's worth a little bit of inconvenience to make sure it is as honest as it can be made.
If you find yourself in a county that chooses its own form of government, you're probably in the state of Texas, given the history of this state with independence.
Answer:
naturalist Charles Darwin
English naturalist Charles Darwin developed the idea of natural selection after a five-year voyage to study plants, animals, and fossils in South America and on islands in the Pacific. In 1859, he brought the idea of natural selection to the attention of the world in his best-selling book, On the Origin of Species.