Almost one-in-five voting members of the House and Senate are a racial or ethnic minority, making the 115th U.S. Congress the most diverse in history. And while Congress as a whole remains disproportionately white when compared with the U.S. population, the racial and ethnic profile of newly elected members more closely resembles the increasingly diverse populace, according to a Pew Research Center analysis.
Overall, nonwhites (including blacks, Hispanics, Asians/Pacific Islanders and Native Americans) make up 19% of the current Congress. By comparison, nonwhite Hispanics and other racial minorities make up 38% of the nation’s population.
Minorities, however, account for 20 of 59 new members (34%) of the House and Senate. This represents a notable jump over the 114th Congress, when just 11 of 71 new members (15%) were aracial or ethnic minority and the Senate had no newly elected minority members. This year, three freshman senators are a racial or ethnic minority, along with 17 new members of the House. hope this helps
Henry W. Longfellow is who said that quote
The answer is A. Beethoven was losing his hearing. He started losing his hearing around 1801.
I would say b or a :) hoped I helped have a goooood dayyy lol
The correct answer is "C. all of history has been a struggle between classes of people."
Karl Marx was a German economist and socialist revolutionary who developed the theory of Marxism, which states that societies have developed a long time through <em>class struggle</em>. He attributes this to <em>capitalism</em>, where the ruling classes, which control the means of production enter in conflict with the working classes, also known as <em>"the proletariat"</em>. This constant struggle would eventually lead to the fall of capitalism and the rise of a new system called <em>socialism</em>.