Sambo, the typical plantation slave, was docile but irresponsible, loyal but lazy, humble but chronically given to lying and stealing; his behavior was full of infantile silliness and his talk inflated with childish exaggeration. His relationship with his master was one of utter dependence and childlike attachment; it was indeed this childlike quality that was the very key to his being. Although the merest hint of Sambo's “manhood” might fill the Southern breast with scorn, the child “in his place,” could be both exasperating and loveable8 (p. 82).
Answer:
False
Explanation:
The land that the Central Pacific cross is not flat. The Central Pacific Railroad was a rail company approved by the U.S. government in 1862 that connected America from West to East. The Central Pacific started building rail tracks in Sacramento that proceed to the Sierra Nevada. The Central Pacific had made it through the mountains and the flat land of western Utah. The railroad has played a vital role in the area by encouraging trade, promoting the growth of the agriculture industry.
Child labour was common
the children didnt received education bevause they were workin to support the family
the working day was estremely long and with harsh conditions...
workers didnt had any rights.or.strike...
if u broke a machine u were killed...
Answer:In the three weeks since George Floyd’s death, public opinion on race and policing has zoomed left. Support for Black Lives Matter is skyrocketing. Almost 60 percent of Americans think police are more likely to use excessive force on an African American suspect than a white suspect — a sea change from 2016, when only 34 percent of registered voters said the same. And an overwhelming majority of Americans now say they support a wide variety of police reforms, even if polling suggests that “defend the police” is still a radioactive slogan.
Explanation: Credits: The Washington Post; Public opinion on policing has shifted.