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Tanya [424]
3 years ago
13

Can someone please write an introduction whether or not kids should be

Social Studies
1 answer:
d1i1m1o1n [39]3 years ago
3 0
We didn’t read the passages... we don’t have enough info to write it
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6. What historic Atlanta communities does Benjamin E. Mays High School serve?
Zina [86]

Answer:

Fulton County

Explanation:

The historic Atlanta communities Benjamin E. Mays High School serve is Fulton County. Fulton County is situated in the southwest of Atlanta. It is a historic area, due to the early construction of railroad built in the county, and was popular after the American civil war serving as business hub center as a result of railroad and shipping port.

Hence, the correct answer is FULTON COUNTY

8 0
3 years ago
How does the Capitol building in Washington D.C. demonstrate all of the influences from Greece, Rome, and the Renaissance
oksian1 [2.3K]

Answer:

Its architecture

Explanation:The architecture used there was inspired of Greek,Roman architecture and the renaissance

4 0
4 years ago
Roosevelt came from a prominent family discuss his family and backround
Pachacha [2.7K]

Franklin Delano Roosevelt was born January 30, 1882 in the city of Hyde Park, New York State.

Son of James Roosevelt and Sara Roosevelt, Franklin was born into a wealthy family of Dutch origin.

He was the cousin of Theodore Roosevelt, who also held the post of President of the United States from 1901.

He joined Harvard University in 1904. He later studied law at Columbia University in New York (1908). He married his cousin Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, with whom he had six children.

Before being elected president he held various positions in the politics of the country. He was a Democratic politician, Senator of the Dutchess District, Deputy Secretary of State for the Navy and Governor of New York State.

6 0
3 years ago
Why has the president gained more war powers over time
slava [35]

For more than 100 years, from the expiration of the Sedition Act of 1798 until America’s entry into World War I, the United States had no federal legislation banning rebellious expression. The War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War and the Spanish-American War all were fought without criminalizing the right of dissent.

It was Woodrow Wilson, shortly after his re-election in 1916 but well before America’s entry into World War I, who sought legislation to suppress disloyalty. Wilson requested that Congress give the president absolute authority to censor the press in the event of war, to make it a federal crime to promote the success of America’s enemies and to close the mail to any material deemed “of a treasonable or anarchistic character.” Wilson insisted that the power he requested was “absolutely necessary to the public safety.” After America entered the war, Congress passed the Espionage Act of 1917, which incorporated much of what Wilson asked for but not the authority to censor the press.

F.D.R. may be guilty of the most extreme disregard for civil liberty, although his action was endorsed by Congress and later upheld in two landmark Supreme Court decisions. Unlike Wilson and Adams, F.D.R. had no interest in launching a wartime crusade to promote ideological conformity. But he had been blindsided by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, and he was unwilling to second-guess the War Department when it urged action in the interest of military security. The 1942 relocation of Japanese-Americans from their homes on the West Coast was, in Roosevelt’s view, simply another act of wartime necessity dictated by the risk to America’s defenses.

But there was little justification for the action. Adm. Harold Stark, the chief of naval operations, and Gen. Mark Clark, the Army’s deputy chief of staff, had testified before Congress that the Pacific Coast was in no danger of invasion, and the possibility of Japanese-immigrant-inspired sabotage was no greater than that which might arise from German or Italian immigrants elsewhere in the country.

The initial agitation to remove the Japanese came from California civilians, and was tainted by long-standing racism and greed. The clamor was magnified by the state’s political leaders, including Earl Warren, then California’s attorney general, and was transmitted to Washington by Lt. Gen. John DeWitt, the overall Army commander on the West Coast.

When De Witt’s request arrived at the War Department, the Army general staff vigorously opposed the action. But the Pentagon’s civilian leadership, Secretary Henry L. Stimson and Assistant Secretary John J. McCloy, were convinced of the military necessity and transmitted that view to F.D.R. Roosevelt gave the matter too little attention; if Stimson and McCloy recommended that the Japanese be evacuated, he was not going to dispute them. On Feb. 19, 1942, Roosevelt signed the executive order that they had prepared, authorizing the forcible evacuation of people of Japanese ancestry from a designated war zone along the Pacific Coast.

By presidential directive, 120,000 Japanese residents, 80,000 of whom were American citizens by birth, were taken from their homes, farms and businesses and interned at relocation sites far inland. Roosevelt showed little remorse. In March of 1942, when Henry Morgenthau Jr., the treasury secretary, told F.D.R. about the financial losses the Japanese had suffered, the president said he was “not concerned about that.” History has judged Roosevelt harshly. There is little question that he had the authority to issue the order. Whether he should have done so is another matter.

In the Korean conflict, President Harry Truman stretched his commander-in-chief power to seize and operate the nation’s steel mills. During the Vietnam War, President Richard Nixon sought to prevent The New York Times and The Washington Post from publishing the Pentagon Papers, secret documents pertaining to American military strategy that Daniel Ellsberg had stolen from the Defense Department. In neither case was national survival at risk, and in both cases the Supreme Court struck down the president’s action.

 national security concern does not become a war simply because it is baptized as such. President George W. Bush’s questionable use of the metaphor “war on terror” to justify indefinite detention of suspects, warrantless eavesdropping and spying on the reading habits of citizens could invite from historians even more opprobrium than they have cast on the repressive actions taken by other presidents when the survival of the United States was at risk."


hope this helps

7 0
3 years ago
What single invention paved the way for the birth of the Renaissance era? printing press Stradivarius violin telescope quill pen
dimulka [17.4K]
Gutenberg's printing press would incite the Renaissance era due to the new ability to more easily manufacturer texts such as books, pamphlets, and other forms of movable type. 
6 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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