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PSYCHO15rus [73]
3 years ago
13

WILL GIVE BRAINLIEST!!!! Will report links. :( THANKS!

History
1 answer:
grin007 [14]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

Postage meters have come a long way. Thanks in part to the recent surge of home-based businesses, people have plenty of efficient, affordable options. In fact, the latest generation of online mailing and shipping solutions do more than just print postage. They can find you the best rates

Luckily, there is an ingenious solution to help voters on not only the national level but locally as well. Check out electnext.com (http://electnext.com/) where you can answer questions in regard to where you stand + see how candidates align with you. It's an awesome web startup that does the dirt work of keeping on top of issues for you.

Presidents have two large responsibilities that rest almost entirely with them. Selecting Supreme Court justices and handling foreign affairs. I think a good place to start it so determine how each candidate would act in these two spheres.

First of all, you are correct. Only 4 presidents have gotten 60% or more of the vote: Johnson over Goldwater, Roosevelt over Landon, Nixon over McGovern and Harding over Cox. A few more came close. (George Washington ran unopposed, so, he got all the votes, but that doesn’t seem to count for this). Most races have been close; indeed, 18 presidents got elected with less than 50% of the vote. Considering that statistics on popular vote don’t exist for the first 9 elections, that’s remarkable (Source: List of United States presidential elections by popular vote margin)

Explanation:

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Pretending your are teaching your child American history in the future
nadezda [96]

Answer:

the civil rights movement

Explanation:

I feel like this is a very important topic and still applies to our society today with the fact that segregation has ended, however many people are still racist and try to advocate for it.

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2 years ago
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Which features of a federal bureaucracy help it run efficiently?
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A. Job specialization and Formalized rules
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Why was phillis wheatley a patriot?
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<span>Because She belived that she was going to get a better job being a patriot than being a loyalist</span>
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3 years ago
What does the quote the only way to get through a bigots door is to break it mean
White raven [17]

Answer:

It means that being friendly towards oppressors will not have you get your rights. You cannot sit and wait for people to give you or others equal rights. The only proper way to get them to stop is by force, to hit them where it hurts. You could add the protests/BLM movement in as an example, the fact that policemen who kill innocent Black men and women typically walk free or get a slap on the wrist unless people demand justice.

The quote was made by civil rights activist Thurgood Marshall, the first Black man who served at the Supreme Court.

8 0
3 years ago
How did this affect America and which event helped to draw the U.S. into the war, even though President Wilson “non call for war
RideAnS [48]

Answer:

On April 2, 1917, President Woodrow Wilson asks Congress to send U.S. troops into battle against Germany in World War I. In his address to Congress that day, Wilson lamented it is a fearful thing to lead this great peaceful people into war. Four days later, Congress obliged and declared war on Germany.

In February and March 1917, Germany, embroiled in war with Britain, France and Russia, increased its attacks on neutral shipping in the Atlantic and offered, in the form of the so-called Zimmermann Telegram, to help Mexico regain Texas, New Mexico and Arizona if it would join Germany in a war against the United States. The public outcry against Germany buoyed President Wilson in asking Congress to abandon America’s neutrality to make the world safe for democracy.

Wilson went on to lead what was at the time the largest war-mobilization effort in the country’s history. At first, Wilson asked only for volunteer soldiers, but soon realized voluntary enlistment would not raise a sufficient number of troops and signed the Selective Service Act in May 1917. The Selective Service Act required men between 21 and 35 years of age to register for the draft, increasing the size of the army from 200,000 troops to 4 million by the end of the war. One of the infantrymen who volunteered for active duty was future President Harry S. Truman.

READ MORE: US Entry into World War I

In addition to raising troop strength, Wilson authorized a variety of programs in 1917 to mobilize the domestic war effort. He appointed an official propaganda group called the Committee on Public Information (CPI) to give speeches, publish pamphlets and create films that explained America’s role in the war and drummed up support for Wilson’s war-time policies. For example, the CPI’s representatives, known as four-minute men, traveled throughout the U.S. urging Americans to buy war bonds and conserve food. Wilson appointed future President Herbert Hoover to lead the Food Administration, which cleverly changed German terms, like hamburger and sauerkraut, to more American-sounding monikers, like liberty sandwich or liberty cabbage.

Wilson hoped to convince Americans to voluntarily support the war effort, but was not averse to passing legislation to suppress dissent. After entering the war, Wilson ordered the federal government to take over the strike-plagued railroad industry to eliminate the possibility of work stoppages and passed the Espionage Act aimed at silencing anti-war protestors and union organizers.

The influx of American troops, foodstuffs and financial support into the Great War contributed significantly to Germany’s surrender in November 1918. President Wilson led the American delegation to Paris for the negotiation of the Treaty of Versailles in June 1919, a controversial treaty—which was never ratified by Congress–that some historians claim successfully dismantled Germany’s war machine but contributed to the rise of German fascism and the outbreak of World War II. Wilson’s most enduring wartime policy remains his plan for a League of Nations, which, though unsuccessful, laid the foundation for the United Nations.

Explanation:

7 0
3 years ago
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