Congress has a hard time overriding presidential vetoes because it is hard to get two thirds of a vote from both sides.
There were many problems,
First, although they were technically 'free', there was little work in the war-tattered south, other than the very plantations from which these people were emancipated.
Secondly, they had no money or assets in most cases. Many began on the long migration of poor African Americans from the south to the industrial north, which continued through the 1970s.
The biggest problem, however, was the ongoing discrimination they faced. Jim Crow Laws throughout the south enforced segregation in public places, and most remained in place until the 1960s Civil Rights Movement ultimately resulted in Federal legislation negating most (unconstitutional) segregation laws.
Hope this helped!
Germany, Italy, Japan
Hope this help
Ahy trained historians of Japan in the Western world was too small to
sustain such an enterprise. Although that number has grown, the
general editors have thought it best to draw on Japanese specialists for
contributions in areas where they retain a clear authority. In such
cases the act of translation itself involves a form of editorial cooperation
that requires the skills of a trained historian whose name deserves
acknowledgment.
The answer to this question would be 'true'