Answer:
USSR under the leadership of Josef Stalin was a living hell to peasants and farmers alike. Stalin's regime aimed to completely indoctrinate everything under communism. Farmers were seen as part of the bourgeoisie (as Marx dubbed the middle class, who were destroying society in his view) since they owned land, so they forced them to cede their land to the government and live in community farms. Additionally, biologists like Trofim Lysenko produced theories that seeds can "help" other plant seeds that were struggling to survive, so they should be planted all in the same hole so they can do this. Lysenkoism was the belief that biology was being taught in a capitalistic standard and that since communism was in the state of nature, nature of communistic. Thousands starved to death, but the leaders deeply believed that they were doing it out of spite, and the failing crops were not because of Lysenkoism but because of sabotage from capitalist sympathizers. Thousands more were imprisoned for the crime of starving and were brought to prisons so they can die quietly without international attention. No one was allowed to criticize the government as it was seen as treason. It was an awful period of time.
Answer:
To pressure institutions into compliance with the nondiscrimination mandate of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Moderate is the correct answer.
The main issues defended when signing the Treaty of Paris were the recognition of U.S. independence and the marking of boundaries (B).
The Treaty was signed between the United States of America and George III's Great Britain, as an end to the American Revolutionary War.
Article 1 of the treaty acknowledges the U.S. as free, sovereign, and independent states.
The treaty also established boundaries between the territories belonging to the British Empire in North America (mostly in present-day Canada) and those belonging to the U.S.