Answer:
The soldiers were afraid of death. This was their biggest concern, but they were also afraid of being seriously injured, weakened and physically disabled. This was omitted from most of the letters they sent to their families, as well as information about who was already disabled as a result of the fighting. These concerns were largely omitted by the soldiers so that they would not frighten their families.
Explanation:
This question is about "Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam," a documentary film that presents a year of a soldier's life during the Vietnam War. The film shows the terror of war and how it influences a soldier's psychological, his fears, concerns and the uncertainty of his days. The film features a series of letters, where soldiers keep in touch with their families, but omit situations, events and thoughts so as not to worry their families.
Answer:
Equality under the law.
Explanation:
Civil rights struggles have always had one common characteristic, regardless of their approach to the various and notable problems that many people still suffer to this day, and that is a claim that, as an emblem, was born through the bourgeois revolution in France in 1789: all people are equal under the law and all human beings have inalienable rights that cannot, under any circumstance, be taken away. All civil rights struggles, in reiteration, are aimed at fulfilling the promise of equality, under all aspects of existence, according to the law.
Central powers: (WW1)
Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Turkey
Axis Powers: (WW2)
Germany, Italy, and Japan
My teach told me as well put the central powers just in case.
Sorry if I am wrong.
The difference lies in interpreting the two sides of the conflict. McPherson saw the war as the war between the evil South and the good North. He was focused on the abolition of slavery and their integration into the society as free people. Horwitz on the other hand saw South not as evil but as a faction which went to war to protect its economic interests.