<span>The Court's ruling took the public by complete surprise. It did not, however, diminish its support for the objectives of the Keating Owen Act. The New York Times concluded that child labor, like the sale of alcoholic beverages, might better be left to the control of the local authorities; but others regarded the decision as a blow to justice and thus an aberration. Clearly, the Court remained unconvinced that child labor was in itself a social evil. Congress reacted angrily, acting, only months after the opinion had been issued, to amend the Revenue Bill of 1919 to include a prohibitive tax on the products of child labor, a provision later ruled invalid by the child labor tax case of 1922 (Bailey v. Drexel Furniture Company). During the First World War, the War Labor Policy Board, under the direction of Felix Frankfurter, inserted a clause in all federal contracts of the time making the provisions of the Keating Owen Act mandatory for anyone selling equipment and other war material to the government. Before long, advocates of child labor reform discovered yet another alternative by which to achieve the implementation of a national policy restricting child labor--the amendment of the Constitution itself. In 1924 a proposed amendment was submitted to the states for consideration, but was never ratified by the requisite number. Once again, conditions had begun to change. The introduction of new technologies and innovative manufacturing techniques encouraged the employment of better motivated and more highly educated workers. Hostility toward child labor continued to grow, but the passage of higher state mandatory educational requirements and vigorous enforcement of truancy laws made employing children increasingly burdensome and uncertain. The 1920 census reflected this situation by recording a decline in child labor, a decline that would continue into the 1930s with the passage of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, which established minimum wage and hour standards nationwide, discouraging the employment of minors. By setting minimum wages, it decreased incentives to hire children.</span>
Answer:
B: Protect the right of black citizens to vote. (This was right for me I'm not sure its different for everyone)
Explanation:
In the 20th Century, Boxer Rebellion started in China started then in the mid-20th Century power struggle started between KMT and CCP.
<h3>What do you know about the Chinese Cultural Revolution?</h3>
The Cultural Revolution was launched in China in 1966 by Communist leader Mao Zedong.
The reason for the cultural revolution was:
- High inflation in China, led to demoralized citizens and the military.
- Zedong believed that current Communist leaders were taking the party, and the country, in the wrong direction,
- He considered the years after the 1950s as infiltrated by “bourgeois”.
- Mao called on the nation’s youth to purge the “impure” elements of Chinese society and revive the revolutionary spirit.
- The Cultural Revolution continued in various phases until Mao’s death in 1976
Therefore, the events that occurred in China which started with the Boxer rebellion to the power struggle in the 1950s led to a cultural revolution.
Learn More about cultural revolution:
brainly.com/question/23605025
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Basically, you kill a lamb, paint its blood on the outside of your door, and eat unleavened bread (bread that doesn't rise). The blood tells God not to destroy an Israelite's house, and the bread signifies that the Israelites had to leave quickly.