The best answer for this statement would be:
fair because it presents different sides of an issue.
<span>A historian would look for both sides of the story, since it’s profession involves extensive research and reading carefully on each point of view. </span>
The answer is slither states
I think the correct answer from the choices listed above is the third option. The connection between the 1933 National Industry Recovery Act (NIRA) and the 1935 National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) would be that the <span>Supreme Court declared the NIRA unconstitutional, leading to the passage of the NLRA. Hope this answers the question.</span>
Marcus Garvey advocated for economic independence for blacks, and ultimately he argued for black nationalism.
Marcus Garvey (1887-1940) founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) in 1914. He promoted blacks taking power into their own hands, becoming their own business owners rather than dealing with unfairness at the hands of white employers. He himself opened a restaurant, started a newspaper, and established the Black Star Line, which was the first black-owned shipping company in the US. "Garveyism" meant black people establishing business and commerce enterprises for blacks as a way of achieving economic independence and success. In "The Negro's Greatest Enemy," published in 1923, Garvey argued that Negroes were their own worst enemy and needed to take control of their own futures. He was one of the early figures in what became the black nationalism movement.
Answer:
They ignored it
Explanation:
The Boland Amendment aimed to prohibit the federal government from providing support to the Contras in Nicaragua. Instead of directly getting involved like that, they decided to ask someone else to support it, and that was Iran. Iran was the subject of an arms embargo which meant that the Contras were able to buy arms (guns) from Iran to overthrow the Nicaraguan government, and this ended up being a political scandal in Reagan's administration.