Answer:
Explanation:
In 1935 Hitler had 2 laws passed that accomplished the following.
- Jews were deprived of their German citizenship and
- German purity (blood) was protected by forbidding Jews from Marrying German Citizens. Any sexual relations between the races was also prohibited.
- These two laws were the Nuremberg Laws.
The Holocaust was the attempt by Hitler and the German Nazi Party to murder every Jew (in the world if they got that far) but certainly in Europe. They diminished the Jewish population in Europe by 1/2 killing 6 million of them -- a number I find incomprehensible and an act even more incomprehensible.
I urge you to search out the word Holocaust. The German Holocaust was not the only one. There were quite a few even after world war II. You would think that the one in Europe would have been enough. It certainly wasn't.
Are there options? If not, I would say Dollar Diplomacy.
Answer: The civil rights movement was an empowering yet precarious time for Black Americans. The efforts of civil rights activists and countless protesters of all races brought about legislation to end segregation, Black voter suppression and discriminatory employment and housing practices.
Explanation:
Answer:
The changes to the environment brought by white settlers
Explanation:
Just did it on edg
NOT a motivation of Congressional Republicans:
D) Congressional leaders wanted to restore the Union as quickly as possible.
President Lincoln had wanted to restore the Union as quickly as possible. His 10 Percent Plan would have r<span>equired just 10 percent of the voters in the states that had seceded to guarantee their allegiance to the United States and to affirm the emancipation of slaves --and that would be enough to restore those states to the Union and have them draft new state constitutions.
A number of the Republican leaders in Congress came to be known as Radical Republicans. They believed </span><span>Lincoln’s plan for Reconstruction was too lenient. They wanted harsh terms, to punish the South for creating the need for war. The </span>Radical Republicans<span> sought to control the Reconstruction process and impose major changes upon the southern states. The Radical Republicans grew in power in the postwar years, and came into strong conflict with Lincoln's successor, Pres. Andrew Johnson, over how Reconstruction would proceed.</span><span>
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