The Neutrality Acts in general, which were passed in the 1930s, were passed as Europe was once again moving towards armed conflict. The US was a very isolationist country after World War I and wanted to make it clear to the world that they would not intervene.
The Great Depression of the 1930s changed Americans' view of unions. Although AFL membership fell to fewer than 3 million amidst large-scale unemployment, widespread economic hardship created sympathy for working people. At the depths of the Depression, about one-third of the American work force was unemployed, a staggering figure for a country that, in the decade before, had enjoyed full employmentWith the election of President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932, government -- and eventually the courts -- began to look more favorably on the pleas of labor. In 1932, Congress passed one of the first pro-labor laws, the Norris-La Guardia Act, which made yellow-dog contracts unenforceable. The law also limited the power of federal courts to stop strikes and other job actions.
When Roosevelt took office, he sought a number of important laws that advanced labor's cause. One of these, the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (also known as the Wagner Act) gave workers the right to join unions and to bargain collectively through union representatives. The act established the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) to punish unfair labor practices and to organize elections when employees wanted to form unions. The NLRB could force employers to provide back pay if they unjustly discharged employees for engaging in union activities.
<span>In an purely socialist system, the government controls the property and distribution of income, so that the property and income can be distributed evenly among the people. Workers revolted and formed labor unions in order to improve working conditions for the workers joining the unions.</span>
<span>the correct option is C
</span><span>borders created by imperialist nations have led to modern ethnic tensions
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Modern ethnic tensions were caused by the scramble for and partition of the various spheres of influence often putting often hostile communities into one border, or separating these communities into different states, therefore diminishing their political importance.
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