<span>Yes, because the amendment did not provide legislation to enforce the universal right to vote.
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<span>When Franklin Delano Roosevelt gave his State of the Union address in 1941, the United States was once again on the brink of a world war. In the devastating aftermath of World War I, the United States adopted an isolationist stance, declining to join the League of Nations, refusing to sign the Versailles Treaty, and implementing the Neutrality Acts. All of these steps were taken to avoid any future US involvement in another Great War. By 1940, however, France had fallen to Germany, and the Axis Powers’ domination of Europe was nearly complete. Roosevelt, who was strongly opposed to the isolationist stance of the US, had been providing Great Britain with supplies but was prevented from openly declaring war or sending in troops. Roosevelt’s carefully crafted State of the Union speech was designed to outline the justifications for the direct involvement of the United States in World War II—a conflict he believed the US would eventually be forced to enter regardless. In his address (which would later be known as the Four Freedoms Speech), Roosevelt pointed to “four essential human freedoms” that the United States should fight to protect. Roosevelt’s speech resonated very deeply with the American public and his four freedoms came to represent both America’s wartime goals and the core values of American life.</span>
Answer:
Author: H.M Tomilson
Time/place of creation: 1912
Intended audience: People reading "The sea and the jungle"
Main idea: He thinks his colleagues are sloppy or not as good as they should be
Context: A man on point is writing about his experience on a boat. He alarms his views of the people he is with.
Point of view: The p.o.v is positive towards his fellow colleagues and says that they are good at their job. But also he talks down about them like saying they are dirty drunk men. He thinks of himself as a higher man than the rest of them. However, he doesn't think he is higher than his captain, but he believes he can do better under a better captain.
Bias: He is very biased towards the people that are good at their job and towards himself.
Accuracy: Primary source