benjamin franklin championed the north american participation in the enlightenment especially through his use of experimentation using the scientific method to resolve questions about are natural surroundings and physical forces.
Answer:
Yes. The governent broke natives culture
Explanation:
Native Americans have always been full with culture. Their hair, makeup, clothing, braclets and ect. have always been apart of their culture. The native americans have been beaten, raped, killed, and hurt in any possible way. This is the first Genocide and Racism/descrimination in america. But even Through all of that Native americans held on to their soul, heart, tribes, and culture. However, The Dawes Act
Between 1887 and 1933, US government policy aimed to assimilate Indians into mainstream American society. The Dawes Act also promised US citizenship to Native Americans who took advantage of the allotment policy and 'adopted the habits of civilized life. Nowdays the goverment gave money to the native american tribes for being misstreated. The U.S. government has agreed to pay a total of $492 million to 17 American Indian tribes for mismanaging natural resources and other tribal assets, according to an attorney who filed most of the suits. Also people who are 100 or 50% native american get cards that means no goverment or police fbi or anything can harm them or step foot on their property. but also these days native american women are being taken. INCONCLUSION yes it did change native lifes
According to my notes the correct answer is C
The “tan soldiers,” as the black press affectionately called them, were also for the most part left out of the triumphant narrative of America’s “Greatest Generation.” In order to tell their story of helping defeat Nazi Germany in my 2010 book, “Breath of Freedom,” I had to conduct research in more than 40 different archives in the U.S. and Germany.
When a German TV production company, together with Smithsonian TV, turned that book into a documentary, the filmmakers searched U.S. media and military archives for two years for footage of black GIs in the final push into Germany and during the occupation of post-war Germany.
They watched hundreds of hours of film and discovered less than 10 minutes of footage. This despite the fact that among the 16 million U.S. soldiers who fought in World War II, there were about one million African-American soldiers.