1.)A
2.)C
I am 100% sure on number 2 and 75% sure on 1 but if you look it up for a brief 30 seconds you will double check it
<span>people were tied of the Washington insiders so they elected Jimmy Carter, rise of Christian fundamentalism as a reaction to the Watergate scandal & wanted to go back to conservative values like before the counterculture</span>
The positive effect of the Industrial Revolution was that "advances were made in medicine and technology".
I would call this the 'Red Scare' as a phobia against communism or radical politics after WWI probably because the Soviet Union came out of WWI but on the contrary there were a lot of sympathizers to the cause of the Soviet Union and interest in their new experiment of actually trying to implement socialism at least among the Canadian and American working classes and many union members.
Notable social reformers of the era included: Jane Addams<span>, Lillian Wald, </span>Elizabeth Cady Stanton,Susan B. Anthony<span>, </span>Carrie Nation<span>, </span>Margaret Sanger<span>, </span>Harriet Tubman<span>, </span>Alice Paul<span> and Lucy Burns (please see the </span>“people”<span> section of the website to learn more about these individuals!) Influential journalists and writers who helped carry the message of social reform included Jacob Riis, Ida Tarbel, Upton Sinclair and Thomas Nast. Political reformers of the time included: </span>Theodore Roosevelt<span>, Eugene V. Debs, </span>William E.B. Dubois<span> and Booker T. Washington. Altogether, these reformers were powerful voices for progressivism. They concentrated on exposing the evils of corporate greed, combating fear of immigrants, and urging Americans to think hard about what democracy meant.</span>