Explanation:
"Another little-remembered facet of anti-Latino discrimination in the United States is school segregation. Unlike the South, which had explicit laws barring African-American children from white schools, segregation was not enshrined in the laws of the southwestern United States. Nevertheless, Latino people were excluded from restaurants, movie theaters and schools.
Latino students were expected to attend separate "Mexican schools" throughout the southwest beginning in the 1870s. At first, the schools were set up to serve the children of Spanish-speaking laborers at rural ranches. Soon, they spread into cities, too."
<span>Ida B Wells used a strategy we would today called "data journalism" in her anti-lynching campaign. She traveled through the south keeping records of all the lynchings that occured and the reasons for them. She then put this together in her book "A Red Record: Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynchings In the United States" establishing several arguments of how lynchings were used to control African Americans.</span>
I think it’s a I’m not really sure but I really think it’s a
Belgium
King Leopold,who treated the colony as a personal estate. He pushed blacks into forced labor to collect rubber for him, as well as other valuable minerals. unlike other imperial powers, Leopold did not invest in the education, and infrastructure of the kingdom, and when he left, the kingdom had a very few elites, and intellectuals.
<span />
800 units
because its ping spoofing and the bisictor says so