Answer:
When most Americans think of the Civil Rights Movement, they have in mind a span of time beginning with the 1954 Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education, which outlawed segregated education, or the Montgomery Bus Boycott and culminated in the late 1960s or early 1970s.
Explanation:
Base on the question that ask to choose among the following choices that states what both James I and Charles I of England believed in and base on my research, I would say that the answer would be that the both believe in parliamentary supremacy. I hope you are satisfied with my answer and feel free to ask for more
Doctor Hannah Tyrrel
1952
Inglewood Drive Lincon, Nebraska 68512
The two ways which the Reformation changed Europe is:
1) Henry 8th split the English church away from the pope. but this was an argument about succession and power and not move towards Protestantism. He remained Catholic the rest of his life.
2) Elizabeth 1 first tried to follow a 'middle way' in religion, but later began to persecute Catholics by end of the reign England was a protestant county.
{I'm not sure if this is right as I never learned the topic yet. but I hope this will try and help you. If you're still stuck the answers are the BBC bitesize KS3 history on the Tudors and stuarts}
Answer:
Las sociedades modernas no permiten el desarrollo de pensamientos nacionalsocialistas debido a las características totalitarias de estos regímenes, que defienden los siguientes conceptos:
-El racismo era una parte importante de la cosmovisión nacionalsocialista. La "raza aria", en la que se incluyeron los alemanes, fue considerada superior y en peligro de extinción por otras razas. Los representantes de esta raza debían evitarse los efectos dañinos de mezclarse con otras razas.
-El nacionalsocialismo, como el fascismo y el comunismo, era antidemocrático y preveía la abolición de los partidos, los sindicatos libres y la prensa libre. El resaltado de las diferencias políticas y los intereses de clase tuvo que ser reemplazado por un conjunto nacional unido por un culto principal.