I think a good answer is is Georgia. This colony was envisioned as a "haven for debtors". But it was not only a colony for debtors: it was actually also meant for "the worthy poor" and the debtors.
Garvey founded the Universal Association for Black Progress (AUPN), a nationalist type organization that preached the cultural, economic, and social development of blacks, which should be governed by a government of their own. The motto “One God! An aspiration! A destiny! ”Clearly demonstrates the religious imprint of its ideology.
His association has grown to thousands of branches in over 40 countries around the world.
Between 1918 and 1933, during his travels in the United States, he founded in Harlem the weekly Negro World, which influenced the black movement of the country, being primordial in the Harlem Renaissance, which was a time of important development of American black culture.
B. Walter Rauschenbusch
Rauschenbusch was a theologian who wrote Christianity and the Social Crisis in 1907, so that is the correct. Upton Sinclair was a muckraker, who wrote "the Jungle". Jane Addams was a suffragette and Ida Tarbell was another muckraker. So, A, C and D are not correct.
A because of the excesses of the roaring 20s but the communst version in e Asia doomed to failure because of secular extremism evidensed by carnage