The correct answers are 2) By the 1880s, Standard Oil had become the largest oil refiner in the country, controlling access to 90 percent of the refined oil in the US. 4) Throughout the year 1904, investigative journalist Ida Tarbell published her famous series of articles on Standard Oil, mostly critiquing the company's ruthless practices.
The two facts that might help explain Keppler's depiction of Standard Oil are "By the 1880s, Standard Oil had become the largest oil refiner in the country, controlling access to 90 percent of the refined oil in the US." And "Throughout the year 1904, investigative journalist Ida Tarbell published her famous series of articles on Standard Oil, mostly critiquing the company's ruthless practices."
Here, the question is referring to the political cartoon published by cartoonist Udo J. Keppler. The cartoon appeared in "Puck Magazine," in the edition of September 7, 1904.
In the cartoon, Keppler depicts the Standard Oil storage tank as the head of a giant octopus with tentacles wrapped around many industries such as the steel, copper, and shipping companies. This, in reference to the monopolistic practices of John F. Rockefeller. The octopus is holding the statehouse, the U.S. Capitol, and is about to reach for the icon of US politics, the White House. Then you can read the word "Next!"
Because people experience the world differently.
Everything, from their point of view to the emotions they were feeling at the time, can influence how somebody remembers something.
Yes he would do this I’m sorry I just need points to ask a question.
Answer:
Slaves below the decks lived for months in conditions of squalor and indescribable horror
Disease spread and ill health was one of the biggest killers
Mortality rates were high
death made these conditions below the decks even worse
The slaves who had already been ill ridden were not always found immediately
Many of the living slaves could have been shackled to someone that was dead for hours and sometimes days
Explanation:
They were also beaten at most times
starved
and just mis treated in general