Answer:
It would be the second option
Explanation:
:)
Here are Four reasons: Social Networks, caring for the sick, widows and orphans, stance against adultery, abortion and infanticide, and of course a theology of love :)
I believe 1 and 4 are incorrect. 4 is quite ridiculous, England won the war and had no reason whatsoever to cede colonies to the Germans. 1 is debatable, but the general consensus is that the Americans joined less to fight the "enemy over there" but rather because they felt threatened by Germany's potential alliance with a powerful Mexico and because of Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare. That said, one could argue that 1, in this case, is correct.
I believe 2 and 3 are correct. The United States did join the League of Nations after the war to prevent another conflict and promote peace (that didn't work too well). The League of Nations of the past could be compared to the United Nations of today. The American troops that arrived in Europe in the year of 1918 did indeed help stem the German advance. At some points arriving at a rate of 10 000 a day, the fresh American troops pretty much were able to swarm the war-weary Germans and kill more than the Germans could replace.
Answer: A, B, D
Explanation: These are the organisations
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).
Hoped this helped!!!!
The three statements accurately describe the beliefs of the members of the American Indian Movement in the 1970s are-
- The United States had betrayed its own democratic values through its treatment of American Indians.
- The federal government should honor rights it had already given American Indians.
- New laws are needed to protect the rights of American Indians.
<h3>What was American Indian Movement (1970s)?</h3>
Founded in 1968 by Dennis Banks, Eddie Benton BanaiClyde Bellecourt, & George Mitchell in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the American Indian Movement (AIM) is a revolutionary American Indian civil rights organization. Later, Russell Means rose to prominence as the group's spokesperson.
Some key features of American Indian Movement are-
- Its original intent was to aid Indians who had been ejected from reservations by government initiatives and were now living in urban slums.
- Its objectives gradually covered the full range of Indian demands, including economic independence, the revival of traditional culture, the preservation of legal protections, and, most importantly, the restitution of lands they claimed had been wrongfully taken.
- The leadership collapsed in 1978, but local units continued to operate despite the fact that many of its members were imprisoned and split apart by internal strife.
- Beginning in 1981, an AIM group held a portion of a Black Hills in South Dakota to further their demands for the area's return to Indian control.
To know more about American Indian Movement (1970s), here
brainly.com/question/20123091
#SPJ4
The complete question is-
Based on the excerpt, which three statements accurately describe the beliefs of the members of the American Indian Movement in the 1970s?
- The United States had betrayed its own democratic values through its treatment of American Indians.
- American Indian Nations are independent political bodies.
- The federal government should honor rights it had already given American Indians.
- New laws are needed to protect the rights of American Indians.
- American Indians want to be integrated into US society and culture