Answer:
Father Charles Coughlin
Explanation:
Charles Coughlin was a Canadian born Roman Catholic priest in the United States of America. He was also called radio priest for his large audience developed through the medium of his addresses through radio. In the early years, he was an adherent supporter of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his New Deal programs. Later he adopted a critical stand towards the president. His speeches were stressing social and political topics instead of religious ones. He was forced off the radio broadcast in 1939 for his antisemitic and pro-fascist speeches.
Answer:
Black codes were enacted right after the Civil War.
Explanation:
Black Codes were laws created by former Confederate states after the Civil War to weaken the status of blacks in those states. Laws began to be created in 1865 with the passage of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution in the United States, which officially liberated all black slaves.
Black Codes had time to be created for more than a year before Congress, with a Republican party opposed to slavery in the majority, passed the Civil Rights Act and the 14th and 15th Amendments to the Constitution. In the late 1870s, however, the position of blacks weakened again as racist extremism, led by the Ku Klux Klan, intensified.
Answer:
The release of two atomic bombs on Japan in August 1945 helped end World War II but ushered in the Cold War, a conflict between the United States and the Soviet Union that dragged on nearly half a century. ... Cold War calculations led to a divided Germany and U.S. involvement in wars in Korea and Vietnam
Explanation:
Answer:
yeah, I think it's diamonds and oil.
Explanation:
First of all the majority population is illiterate and there is internal political instability in most of the countries. But it has abundance of natural wealth in the form if diamonds accounting to more than 49 percent of the world's diamond supply. And most of the countries produce oil