Answer:
Explanation:
You wouldn't have to ask the question if you lived in the United States during the Vietnam war. Nothing, no event since the civil war a century earlier, split the American people more than Vietnam.
Basically there were a number of things that it did.
1. Those fighting it were split about going over. Many college educated students would have enlisted immediately after Pearl Harbor in WWII. Those same class of people would not be persuaded that way during Vietnam
2. It gave rise to the civil rights movement. The colored didn't want to go to Vietnam, or not all of them. Those who were opposed, especially the colored, sympathized with organizations like the Black Panthers or the Peace movement headed by Martin Luther King.
3. It brought the war into American living rooms. I can still remember seeing the shooting of a Viet Cong prisoner. At the time, it was extremely graphic and if I may say so, very horrifying.
4. The white middle class was equally upset by Vietnam. There were rallies on the University campuses where the numbers were in the tens of thousands. My mother 79 at the time, insisted on going to one. She was not disappointed. The keynote speaker was Jane Fonda. The body count was just too high not to upset just about everyone.
5. Then there was Kent State. You would do well to look that up.
Answer:
Integration
Explanation:
When legal and social barriers are imposed in order to maintain different groups of people separate it receives the name of segregation. When the opposite process occurs, and these barriers are removed, it receives the name of integration. Integration allows different social, cultural, racial and ethnic groups to interact. This usually reduces social tensions, enriches a country's culture and increases multiculturalism.
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Answer:
The railroad was the mean of transport to new settlers going to the Great Plains in the west who sent crops and grain to cities in the East.
Explanation:
The railroads impacted the migration to the west and helped expanded the country while exchanging crops and grain to the more populated cities stablished in the east.