Answer: Occupying government buildings
Explanation:
The 1960s and 70s saw a lot of protests as the United States began to wake up to the issue of Civil Rights. One such group that had been discriminated against were the Native Americans. They had been cheated, lied to and stolen from and they had had enough.
Groups like the American Indian Movement (AIM) were formed that aimed to improve the conditions of Native Americans. They occupied Alcatraz and the Bureau of Indian Affairs building in Washington in order to force the government to listen to them and in so doing, drew attention to their plight nationwide.
<span>Religion, at that time, was governed by the State. In such, the government controlled all aspects of religious life and what sorts of materials would pass muster as being "proper" and what viewpoints would be considered "non-threatening" to the health of the nation. Any belief systems that were outside of this were considered verboten.</span>
In 1854 the Missouri compromise was appeled by the kansas nebraska act
Answer:
Negative.
Explanation:
I am biasing of the impact from the point of view of people who were not Mongols. One of the main reasons its negative was the destruction and pillaging they caused, Mongols killed, looted, and other heinous actions to people who didn't want to be under Mongolian Rule. Places like Baghdad, which a Golden Age of Islam was happening, was destroyed and became a barren land because the Mongols sieged it and destroyed its irrigation system, The Mongols also burned crops, diverted rivers and catapulted diseased corpses into cities in order to starve or infect people with deadly diseases. Some historians believe that the use of dead bodies by the Mongols is what brought the Black Death to Europe.
The World's Columbian Exposition, held in Chicago in 1893, was the last and the greatest of the nineteenth century's World's Fairs. Nominally a celebration of Columbus' voyages 400 years prior, the exposition was in actuality a reflection and celebration of American culture and society, and a blueprint for life in modern and postmodern America. The fair had a profound effect on architecture, the arts, Chicago's self-image, and American industrial optimism.
The exposition covered more than 600 acres (2.4 km2