Yes, the current American tendency to blame the poor for unfavorable conditions is similar to racist attitudes of the past. Groups in power, whether by class or race, have always tended to attribute their issues to outside parties such as the less-privileged strata of society. For example, Hitler blamed Germany’s post-WWI economic and political suffering on the domestic Jewish population, encouraging the entitled and intolerant “Aryan” Germans. In America today, political groups that are composed of the most-fortunate demographics of society tend to blame the poor for high taxes and invasive social programs. As always, xenophobia against impoverished immigrants prevails and continues to perpetuate the use of “scape-goats” for economic and societal issues brought by other factors.
<span>Thomas Aquinas who attempted to present a rational argument for god's existence two of which being the clockmakers argument and the first causer argument</span>
The <span>"Great Dismal Swamp" </span><span>is the name of an area in Virginia and North Carolina that is now a National Wildlife Refuge</span>
Answer:
If tea arrived in Europe around the same time as when coffee did, why did it not find the immediate success that coffee had? ... Because of the lack of potable water in England when tea (and coffee) was introduced around the year 1650, its use forced those drinking it to boil the water - sterilizing it.
Explanation:
Jackson prompted Congress to pass the Removal Act, a bill that forced Native Americans to leave the United States and settle in the Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River.
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