A primary difference between a treaty and an executive agreement is that A) Treaties must be approved by the Senate; executive agreements do not. A more defined phrase to express this is that "An executive agreement...has not been ratified by the legislatures as treaties are ratified."
Dropping the atomic bomb on Hiroshima
Here's the chronological order:
Invasion of Poland - September, 1939 (beginning of World War II in Europe)
Battle of Britain - July thru October, 1940
D-Day invasion - June, 1944
Dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki - August, 1945
The use of atomic bombs was the final devastating act of destruction of the Second World War.
The historical context of the text is the Civil RIghts Movement in America.
<h3>What was the Civil Rights Movement?</h3>
This refers to the historical period in America that led to the elimination of racial segregation and brought in a period of racial equality between the whites and blacks in America.
Hence, we can see that the first document is a poem that is written about the racial segregation that existed when the blacks and whites were separated in public places, and when they worked in cotton fields as slaves, without pay.
Read more about Civil Rights Movement here:
brainly.com/question/131269
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"At first, the government was reluctant to engage in propaganda campaigns, but pressure from the media, the business sector and advertisers who wanted direction persuaded the government to take an active role. Even so, the government insisted that its actions were not propaganda, but a means of providing information. These efforts were slowly and haphazardly formed into a more unified propaganda effort, although never to the level of World War I. In 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt created the Office of War Information (OWI). This mid-level agency joined a host of other wartime agencies, including the War and State Departments, in the dissemination of war information and propaganda. Officials at OWI used numerous tools to communicate to the American public. These included Hollywood movie studios, radio stations, and printing presses."