Answer:
. After slavery, state governments across the South instituted laws known as Black Codes. These laws granted certain legal rights to blacks, including the right to marry, own property, and sue in court
. Family, church, and school became centers of black life after slavery. The Freedmen’s Bureau (1865-1870), a government agency established to aid former slaves, oversaw some 3,000 schools across the South and ran hospitals and healthcare facilities for the freedmen.
. From the late 1860s white supremacists in the KKK (Ku Klux Klan) terrorized African American leaders and citizens in the South until, in 1871, the US Congress passed legislation that resulted in the arrest and imprisonment of Klan leaders and the end of the Klan’s terrorism of Americans for a time.
Answer:
1. The US government is based on ideas of limited government, including natural rights, popular sovereignty, republicanism, and social contract. Limited government is the belief that the government should have certain restrictions in order to protect the individual rights and civil liberties of citizens.
2. The Constitution diluted power even more by creating a federal form of government. In this way power and authority would be shared between central, state and local governments.
3. I see these ideas reflected in the nation today because they still are applied to the constitution.
4. Yes I do think that the government lives up to the democratic ideas supported by the founders because democracy is still in the U.S to this day.
Hope this helps
I think your answer should be either the third choice or second choice. They both make sense to me but the other two are definitely not it. Hope this helps! =^-^=
Answer:
To plan for a one-day boycott of Montgomery’s city buses for Monday, December 5, 1955
Explanation:
Following the arrest of Rosa Parks on December 1, 1955. E.D. Nixon pays Rosa Parks's bail and calls for a meeting on December 2, 1955. The purpose of the meeting is to "plan for a one-day boycott of Montgomery’s city buses for Monday, December 5, 1955."
The meeting was conducted at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, whereby some clergy and other African American leaders were present.
The resolution of the meeting was broadcasted on television, radio, and newspapers.