Answer:
G.I bill was passed towards the end of the World War II. The law provided some benefits for World War II veterans who came back into the country.
The bill gave an education offer to everyone with no exception so farmers and their children can go to college.
More homes were built possibly taking up more farmland.
These changes led to a drop
In Agricultural activities.More houses being built coupled with free education in the region encouraged more people coming into the area to benefit from such program.
What we are witnessing is the human wreckage of a great historical turning point, a profound change in the social requirements of economic life. We have come to the end of the working class.
We still use “working class” to refer to a big chunk of the population—to a first approximation, people without a four-year college degree, since those are the people now most likely to be stuck with society’s lowest-paying, lowest-status jobs. But as an industrial concept in a post-industrial world, the term doesn’t really fit anymore. Historian Jefferson Cowie had it right when he gave his history Stayin’ Alive the subtitle The 1970s and the Last Days of the Working Class, implying that the coming of the post-industrial economy ushered in a transition to a post-working class. Or, to use sociologist Andrew Cherlin’s formulation, a “would-be working class—the individuals who would have taken the industrial jobs we used to have.”
1. cross out b.
2. cross out a
3. cross out b
hope this helps!
Tax, the power to declare war, and to commerce. Hope this helps! (: