Answer: True
Whitney's hand-cranked machine could remove the seeds from 50 pounds of cotton in a single day.
Answer:
try and search it up like copy the question and google has some article or answers i don't really understand that work because i haven't done that but search it up it will prob tell you the answer.
Explanation:
The social impacts that WWII brought to Texas were:
- 500,000 Texans—Anglos, African Americans, and Hispanics—moved from rural areas to job markets in nearby cities.
- Mexican Americans that fought were determined to seek equality.
- Women went to work to help the war effort ("Rosie the Riveter").
<h3>What were some social impacts of WWII on Texas?</h3>
More than 500,000 Texans left the rural areas to go to the urban areas in order to support wartime production. Women were not left out as they wanted to support the war effort.
Mexican Americans who felt marginalized and yet contributed to the war effort, tried to fight for their equality.
Find out more on the impacts of WWII on Texas at brainly.com/question/15229334.
Answer:
Supporters of the bombings generally believe that they prevented an invasion of the Japanese mainland, saving more lives than they took by doing so. Opponents contend, among other arguments, that the bombings were unnecessary to win the war or that they constituted a war crime or genocide.
Explanation:
Answer: After WWI ended, Hitler turned to the Jews as a scapegoat to blame the lost on.
Explanation: Hitler also began using methods such as indoctrination to teach that there was an inferior race and noninferior race who were minorities such as the Jews and those with disabilities. Jews began to be targeted through events such as Kristallnacht/The Night of Broken Glass. Jews were then segregated into ghettos where there was a lack of food, diseases, etc. so they can slowly kill off Jews. When Hitler decided Jews were not dying fast enough, he turned to the Final Solution which was the mass murder of Jews.