Answer: The use of the thermal imaging and the fourth amendment
Explanation:
I'm going to suppose that your reference point is the "We Must Free Ourselves" speech given by John Lewis in 1963 at the March on Washington. The simple answer to the question is that Lewis did not think President Kennedy and the federal government had given genuine support to the civil rights movement. Lewis was even forced by the Kennedy administration to edit his speech because the initial draft was so strongly critical of the administration. Let me quote you a section from the draft of the speech that Lewis was pressured to drop before actually giving the speech.
Mr. Kennedy is trying to take the revolution out of the street and put it in the courts. Listen, Mr. Kennedy, listen, Mr. congressman, listen fellow citizens, the black masses are on the march for jobs and freedom, and we must say to the politicians that there won’t be a “cooling-off” period. <span>We won’t stop now.
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In the speech which Lewis did give, he pointed criticism at JFK in a less direct way, saying that the party of Kennedy was the also the party of Eastland. James Eastland was a Democratic senator from Mississippi who was staunchly opposed to the civil rights movement.
John Lewis called on black citizens to stand up for their own rights, because the political leaders could not (and some would not) do so for them.
Answer:
It helped Europeans in spreading the Christianity outside Europe.
Explanation:
Although Inquisition had its roots in the 12th Century, it started spreading even in the New World in the second half of the 16th Century.
Because Protestants also started spreading their beliefs in that region in 1570 Inquisition was established in Mexico, which lead to the death of many Protestants. Similar things were happening in Peru and other regions of Latin America.
Answer: A) It granted land to individual families but reduced the land available to tribes.
Explanation:
The law was passed in 1887, and it implied the protection of Indian land and the invocation of Indians in modern capitalist patterns. The law removed traditional elements of land management and introduced the possibility of forming private property. Bypassing the law, the American Indians accepted that laws were imposed on them that had never existed before in any tribal community in North America.