The correct answer is the second option.
On January 8, 1918, Democratic President Woodrow Wilson of the United States presented his Fourteen Point program to end World War I (1914-1918). Wilson's proposal systematized his ideas already made public in April 1917, before the United States went to war. It advocated a “peace without winners or losers” that guaranteed “making the world safe for democracy”. He argued that if the self-determination of the great nations were the basis for peace, then that would be the last conflict, "a war to end all wars."
D. The Judiciary Act of 1789, officially titled "An Act to Establish the Judicial Courts of the United States," was signed into law by President George Washington on September 24, 1789. Article III of the Constitution established a Supreme Court, but left to Congress the authority to create lower federal courts as needed. D is the answer
I just had to leave this here, sorry I couldn't answer the question.
Answer:
Poverty that resulted from years of discrimination.
Explanation:
The Kerner Commission was a Presidential commission established by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1967. The commission drew a report on the riots that caused tension in the United States in the summers of 1967.
While the riots were still going on in Detroit, Michigan, President assigned a commission to find the causes that led to these riots. The cause addressed in the report was the poor neighbourhood conditions of black Americans and limited economic conditions resulted from years of discrimination.
Therefore, the statement that "poverty that resulted from years of
discrimination" is the correct answer.
Answer:
The Pony Express helped mails to deliver faster from one place to another in a short period.
Explanation:
Sending mails from one place to another was difficult, which took more than a week to send it to its destination. Letters sent through ships which regularly operated because of the supply of the goods. Homing pigeons, stagecoach, and railroads were some other methods to sent mails. To reduce the time a speedy mail service was introduced, which came to be known as the Pony Express. The Pony express sent letters from one place to another in a short time through a system of many riders that would gallop (ride horses) across the land to deliver mail. The fast mails help people living far from cities to be connected with recent activity and supported the military to maintain law and order in their stations.