5. The purpose of the cartoon was to create sympathy for the African Americans, considering AJ despised them.
6. The intended audience was anyone who did not agree with AJ's veto. The cartoonist's purpose was to raise awareness to this issue.
7. The tone is obviously sympathy with a hint of bigotry considering Andrew Johnson's large head.
8. AJ was literally kicking out the Bureau with his veto, as illustrated in the cartoon. Racism is still largely prevalent in the government. Congress and the president disagreed on this issue. Newspaper headlines all around the country read, "<em>SIDE WITH CONGRESS, SIDE WITH THE NEGROES. SIDE WITH THE PRESIDENT, SIDE WITH THE WHITE MAN</em>."
Hope this helped.
Large racial and gender wage gaps in the U.S. remain, even as they have narrowed in some cases over the years. Among full- and part-time workers in the U.S., blacks in 2015 earned just 75% as much as whites in median hourly earnings and women earned 83% as much as men.
Rennasaince I dont know how to spell it.
The correct answer is "preserving freedom far into the future."
In Roosevelt's speech to Congress, he is discussing how American citizens have freedoms like speech, religion, and expression. Along with this, he is discussing how critical these rights are to citizens and how the nation must continue to unite based on these core principles.
In Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, he is discussing how the system of government established by the founding fathers must continue to live on as the full quote reads " that this new nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom, and that a government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from this earth." This quote is referring to how American society needs to continue on the foundation created when the US became an independent country.