Civil rights act ended segregation
We are accustomed to a capitalist economy, good communication and transportation, and to solving our problems at the state or national level, so we tend to think that decentralized authority is primitive and ineffective. This is not necessarily so, and feudalism is not completely foreign to American society. Let me try to discuss feudalism from three different aspects. The paragraphs in bold will provide the sort of discussion that you are likely to find in the average college textbook; those in regular print will provide some idea of the historical conditions under which the feudal organization of society arose; and those in red will discuss the growth of an example of American feudalism with which most of you are familiar, if only through films and TV.
<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, <span>the correct response would be except "shift to an agricultural economy" since it was in fact the opposite that helped make Japan an imperial power.</span></span>
Answer:
Treaty of Versailles
Explanation:
The league of nation was a clause in the treaty of Versailles
<span>In the 1954 case of Brown v. Board of Education, written by Chief Just Earl Warren, the Supreme Court decided that having "separate but equal" schools for African American children and for white children was not in fact equal and violated the Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment.</span>