Ida B Wells used a strategy called"data
journalism" in her anti-lynching movement. She trekked through the south
keeping archives of all the lynchings that happened and the explanations for
them. She then put this together in her book "A Red Record: Tabulated
Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynchings
Increasing the number of police in a neighbourhood because there was a rise in crime is an example of a domestic issue
<span>After WWII Russia kept all the territory it had covered and became the USSR, These countries were not given a fair choice in the matter. When countries like Czechoslovakia and Hungary wanted their freedom the USSR reacted swiftly and very hard with soldiers and tanks to wipe out the opposition. Once the USSR collapsed these countries were own their own, for better or worse. Unfortunately old prejudices and hate came out with violent results. If this happened under USSR control they would have crushed the squabbling.</span>
For the answer to the question above, I believe this is what she said to men's silly arguments<u><em> "</em></u><span><u><em>you resemble the fool in the prank who was dressed in women's clothes
while he slept; because those who were making fun of him repeatedly
told him he was a woman, he believed their false testimony more readily
than the certainty of his own identity."</em></u></span>