Answer:
I would just stick with the 4th amendment, which states that tha people can't just tresspass on to your property and police can't search your house just because they want.
Explanation:
The correct answer to your question is A failure to use resources properly and A shortage of well made goods
They were afraid of large numbers of Jews coming in from (in the case of the St. Louis) Germany. 900 people is a lot of people but it would only be the tip of the iceberg if people were allowed to cross the Atlantic and go into the United States. There was a quota of how many people could come in and the US wanted to keep to the quota system.
The United States (at the time of the St. Louis sailing) was neutral, so they also didn't want to endanger that neutrality.
Good Morning!
The right that women did not yet have at the time cited is the right to vote. Female suffrage was only guaranteed from the twentieth century, more precisely in 1919, with the constitutional amendment of number nineteen. In Brazil, for example, women only had the right to vote in 1932.
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Answer:
Their legend has to be seen in the context of the time.
Explanation:
They were seen by many who were suffering because of the Great Depression and The Dust Bowl as almost a couple of Robin Hood characters.
They liked to make a point of letting local people such as farmers keep their money when robbing banks, and the robbing of banks were seen by many in the areas they were operating, as a blow by ordinary people against the financial institutions which were crippling them.
To what extent this was achieving the American Dream is open to question. They were killers who did not hesitate in killing anyone who threatened their arrest. This is undisputedly the case with Clyde Barrow. There are conflicting arguments as to how much direct involvement Bonnie Parker had in their killing spree.
Certainly the myth of The American dream was reflected in the thousands who turned up at both funerals.