Answer:
because it comes from an actual immigrant whose experience agrees with Freedman's statement that one out of every five immigrants was detained.
Explanation:
According to Edward Corsi's quotation from the book "Immigrant Kids", Angelo Pellegrini recounts his experience of his family being detained at Ellis Island as his sister who was ill was rejected and his mother was told that she can't be allowed to go in.
This quotation adds credibility to the text because it comes from an immigrant whose experience agrees with Freedman's statement that one out of five immigrants was detained.
According to the excerpt, it can be inferred that the sentence that supports the idea that sugar was more than just a killer in Louisiana is option 4. "people needed..."
<h3>What does the word Killer mean in the snippet?</h3>
According to the context described in the fragment, reference is made to the fact that sugar in Louisiana was affected by the weather, so the slaves were required to perform faster at the rate of the mills to prevent the crop from being damaged with the cold.
From the above, it can be inferred that this characteristic of the climate and the cultivation of sugar was a difficulty for the lives of the slaves who had to demand too much of themselves to work at full speed.
Note: This question is incomplete because the question and the options are missing. Here is the complete information:
Which line from the passage best provides evidence to support the claim that sugar was more of "a killer" in Louisiana than in the Caribbean?
- "In every single American slave state, the population of enslaved people kept rising. . . ."
- ". . . enough enslaved children were born, lived, and grew to become adults."
- "not only did the slave states need to harvest the cane in perfect rhythm with the grinding mills. . . ."
- "people needed to work faster than the weather. . . ."
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C and C. I remember taking one test like this before
Khalil’s shooting and the ongoing investigation of Officer Cruise put the theme of injustice at the forefront of the novel. The fact that Khalil was unarmed and did not threaten the officer makes his murder unjust. The police are unjust at other points, too, such as when they force Maverick to the ground and pat him down. Race is tied into this theme of injustice as well, since pervasive racism prevents African-Americans from obtaining justice. Starr and Maverick in particular are focused on bringing justice not only for Khalil but also for African-Americans and other oppressed groups, such as the poor. The activist group that Starr joins is called Just Us for Justice because it fights against police maltreatment on the basis of race. At the end of the novel, Starr accepts that injustice might continue but reinforces her determination to fight against it.