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Resolved Question: U.s History Help!!!!?

What major change in the United States occurred between the Civil War and the 1920s?        People returned to their farms where crops grew thanks to new equipment and fertilizers.        Balanced urban and rural growth led to less crowded conditions in the cities.        City populations grew rapidly as both immigrants and native-born citizens looked for higher paying jobs.        The suburbs grew as a result of immigrants trying to make a better life for their families. 2. How did building Central Park in New York City influence the work of urban planners?        It emphasized the development of recreational areas as part of urban growth.        It made it difficult for urban planners to buy the land they needed for similar projects.        It forced planners to consider using skyscrapers.        It set an unreasonable standard for most urban planners. 3. Who was not a nineteenth-century urban planner who promoted the orderly growth of cities?        Louis Sullivan        Daniel Burnham        Frederick Law Olmstead        James Sherman 4. How did political machines contribute to urban political corruption?        by accepting bribes in exchange for favors        by using force to obtain city contracts        by encouraging only whites to vote        by preventing blacks from obtaining housing 5. What was Jane Addams's Hull House in Chicago an example of?        an urban hotel for women only        a political machine that operated to benefit immigrants        a settlement house opened to assist the urban poor        a skyscraper that changed the look of the city 6. Why did the Populist Party fail?        They promoted an economy that did not regulate business.        They pushed for a change in the tax structure.        They neglected present needs in favor of future plans.        Their agenda looked to the past rather than to the future. 7. What was one goal held by some supporters of the Progressive movement?        promoting conservation        establishing a national bank        providing Social Security for the poor        creating a laissez-faire economy 8. What were the investigative journalists who uncovered corruption in business and government in the late 1800s and early 1900s called?        muckrakers        progressives        corruption correspondents        sensationalists 9. What was one reform the Progressive movement achieved?        direct election of U.S. senators        reduction of government regulation        religious involvement in government        elimination of prohibition 10. Which was not an achievement of Theodore Roosevelt's administration?        introducing legislation for social security        building the Panama Canal        establishing several national parks        emphasizing conservation 11. All of the following promoted segregation and denied blacks their civil rights in the period following the Civil War except        sharecropping.        Jim Crow laws.        poll taxes.        literacy tests. 12. Which Supreme Court decision allowed for the segregation of blacks in "separate but equal" facilities?        Marbury v. Madison        Brown v. Board of Education        Plessy v. Ferguson        Dred Scott v. Stanford 13. What was one of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony's goals?        Gain immediate women's suffrage.        Allow men to advocate for women's suffrage.        Achieve voting rights in selected states.        Gain voting rights in exchange for restricting some employment opportunities for women. 14. Which amendment gave women the right to vote?        16th        17th        18th        19th 15. Why did some people support imperialism despite traditional American opposition to colonization?        They thought it would offer relief from some domestic issues.        They wanted to compete with other nations for natural resources.        They thought it would provide Germany with reasons to avoid war.        They believed that because the British were successful at colonization, the United States should also do it. 16. The explosion on the USS Maine and yellow journalism contributed to the U.S. decision to go to war against Spain in 1898. What was another factor?        protecting U.S. investments in Cuba        stopping Cuba from nationalizing U.S. businesses        preventing Spain from attacking the United States        a treaty agreement with England 17. Why did Woodrow Wilson want to form a League of Nations?        He believed nations would be better equipped to avoid an economic crisis.        He envisioned a shared system of providing for world poverty relief.        H more

Resolved Question: US HISTORY HELP?!?!? PLEASE?

61. How did television affect American society beginning in the 1950s? (Points: 5) Television encouraged people to become more diverse. Television promoted a common culture. Television heightened interest in books and newspapers. Television encouraged people to help others. 62. What was one unique element of the election of 1960? (Points: 5) It was the first election to use televised debates. Kennedy was the first Unitarian candidate to run for the presidency. Nixon was a weak opponent. Kennedy had served as both secretary of the Navy and as a U.S. senator. 63. Why were blacks eager to participate in the civil rights movement following World War II? (Points: 5) They had returned from military service to find Jim Crow laws still in place. With the increase in population there were more blacks to advocate for this cause. They resented not being provided the educational benefits of the GI Bill. The political emphasis placed on conformity antagonized black voters. 64. What did not play a significant role in the civil rights movement? (Points: 5) the election of Dwight D. Eisenhower as president Rosa Parks refusing to give up her seat on a bus freedom rides throughout the South a march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama 65. What laws passed during the Johnson administration eliminated segregation in public places and discrimination in voting? (Points: 5) the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 the Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Manpower Training Act of 1968 the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Civil Procedure Reform Act of 1966 the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Civil Rights Act of 1968 66. Medicare and Medicaid were part of Lyndon Johnson's (Points: 5) War on Poverty. Social Security plan. Food for All program. Fair Deal. 67. What Supreme Court decision found that "separate but equal" schools were inherently unequal and unconstitutional? (Points: 5) Miranda v. Arizona Plessy v. Ferguson Gideon v. Wainwright Brown v. Board of Education 68. What sparked the Cuban Missile Crisis? (Points: 5) the threat of an immediate Soviet attack on the United States the discovery of Soviet missiles in communist Cuba the development of Cuban nuclear capability the protection of U.S. business interests in Florida 69. How was the Cuban Missile Crisis resolved? (Points: 5) with an agreement that the Soviet Union would remove missiles from Cuba and the United States from Turkey with Cuba's acceptance of the missiles and a promise not to fire them on the United States with an agreement that both the Soviet Union and the United States would provide aid to Cuba with the United States establishing a missile base in Miami that caused Cuba to back down 70. What was the domino theory? (Points: 5) the belief that if one Southeast Asia nation fell to communism, others would follow the idea that the situation in Southeast Asia would require a blocking strategy the belief that the nations of Southeast Asia needed to align with one another the idea that the decisions to be made in Vietnam were black and whitecommunism or democracy 71. What allowed President Johnson to send additional troops to Vietnam without a formal declaration of war? (Points: 5) Selective Service Act Viet Cong invasion in 1965 voters in the 1964 election Gulf of Tonkin Resolution 72. What view of the Vietnam War led to objections about U.S. participation there? (Points: 5) The United States should have attacked more forcefully at the outset to win the war quickly. The country was too small to worry about. The United States was interfering in another nation's civil war. The Vietnamese should seek assistance from nations that were closer. 73. What 1968 event in Vietnam was a military victory for one side and a psychological victory for the other? (Points: 5) The Tet Offensive was a military victory for the North and a psychological victory for the South. The fall of Saigon was a military victory for the North and a psychological victory for the South. The Tet Offensive was a military victory for the South and a psychological victory for the North. The fall of Saigon was a military victory for the South and a psychological victory for the South. 74. What was the eventual outcome of the Vietnam War? (Points: 5) The fall of Saigon led to a unified, communist Vietnam. The Treaty of Saigon gave concessions to both sides. A cease fire led to the establishment of a neutral zone between North Vietnam and South Vietnam. The fall of Hanoi led to a unified, democratic Vietnam.please tell me how sure you are more

Voting Question: US History questions need to know for test tmrw please help?

61. How did television affect American society beginning in the 1950s? (Points: 5) Television encouraged people to become more diverse. Television promoted a common culture. Television heightened interest in books and newspapers. Television encouraged people to help others. 62. What was one unique element of the election of 1960? (Points: 5) It was the first election to use televised debates. Kennedy was the first Unitarian candidate to run for the presidency. Nixon was a weak opponent. Kennedy had served as both secretary of the Navy and as a U.S. senator. 63. Why were blacks eager to participate in the civil rights movement following World War II? (Points: 5) They had returned from military service to find Jim Crow laws still in place. With the increase in population there were more blacks to advocate for this cause. They resented not being provided the educational benefits of the GI Bill. The political emphasis placed on conformity antagonized black voters. 64. What did not play a significant role in the civil rights movement? (Points: 5) the election of Dwight D. Eisenhower as president Rosa Parks refusing to give up her seat on a bus freedom rides throughout the South a march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama 65. What laws passed during the Johnson administration eliminated segregation in public places and discrimination in voting? (Points: 5) the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 the Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Manpower Training Act of 1968 the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Civil Procedure Reform Act of 1966 the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Civil Rights Act of 1968 66. Medicare and Medicaid were part of Lyndon Johnson's (Points: 5) War on Poverty. Social Security plan. Food for All program. Fair Deal. 67. What Supreme Court decision found that "separate but equal" schools were inherently unequal and unconstitutional? (Points: 5) Miranda v. Arizona Plessy v. Ferguson Gideon v. Wainwright Brown v. Board of Education 68. What sparked the Cuban Missile Crisis? (Points: 5) the threat of an immediate Soviet attack on the United States the discovery of Soviet missiles in communist Cuba the development of Cuban nuclear capability the protection of U.S. business interests in Florida 69. How was the Cuban Missile Crisis resolved? (Points: 5) with an agreement that the Soviet Union would remove missiles from Cuba and the United States from Turkey with Cuba's acceptance of the missiles and a promise not to fire them on the United States with an agreement that both the Soviet Union and the United States would provide aid to Cuba with the United States establishing a missile base in Miami that caused Cuba to back down 70. What was the domino theory? (Points: 5) the belief that if one Southeast Asia nation fell to communism, others would follow the idea that the situation in Southeast Asia would require a blocking strategy the belief that the nations of Southeast Asia needed to align with one another the idea that the decisions to be made in Vietnam were black and whitecommunism or democracy 71. What allowed President Johnson to send additional troops to Vietnam without a formal declaration of war? (Points: 5) Selective Service Act Viet Cong invasion in 1965 voters in the 1964 election Gulf of Tonkin Resolution 72. What view of the Vietnam War led to objections about U.S. participation there? (Points: 5) The United States should have attacked more forcefully at the outset to win the war quickly. The country was too small to worry about. The United States was interfering in another nation's civil war. The Vietnamese should seek assistance from nations that were closer. 73. What 1968 event in Vietnam was a military victory for one side and a psychological victory for the other? (Points: 5) The Tet Offensive was a military victory for the North and a psychological victory for the South. The fall of Saigon was a military victory for the North and a psychological victory for the South. The Tet Offensive was a military victory for the South and a psychological victory for the North. The fall of Saigon was a military victory for the South and a psychological victory for the South. 74. What was the eventual outcome of the Vietnam War? (Points: 5) The fall of Saigon led to a unified, communist Vietnam. The Treaty of Saigon gave concessions to both sides. A cease fire led t more

Resolved Question: US HIST STUDYGUIDE questions Please please help? PLEASE?

1. Which statement identifies a major change in the United States between the Civil War and the 1920s? (Points: 5) People returned to their farms where crops thrived as a result of new equipment and fertilizers. A healthy balance developed between urban and rural growth that led to less crowded conditions in the cities. City populations grew rapidly as both immigrants and native-born citizens sought higher paying jobs. Suburbs sprung up as a result of the immigrant population wanting to make a better life for their families. 2. How did ethnicity and race contribute to changes in the United States in the late nineteenth century? (Points: 5) They caused separate schools to develop for different ethnic groups. They contributed to social stratification. They played a limited role. They contributed to the view of America as a melting pot. 3. How did building Central Park in New York City influence the work of urban planners? (Points: 5) It emphasized the development of recreational areas as part of urban growth. It made it difficult for urban planners to buy the land they needed for similar projects. It forced planners to consider using skyscrapers. It set an unreasonable standard for most urban planners. 4. Who was not a nineteenth-century urban planner who promoted the orderly growth of cities? (Points: 5) Louis Sullivan Daniel Burnham Frederick Law Olmstead James Sherman 5. What unofficial organization helped immigrants and others cope with nineteenth- and early twentieth-century city life while also accepting bribes in exchange for favors? (Points: 5) Fair Deal Exchange Plunkitt's Party Tammany Hall Tweed Machine 6. What was Jane Addams's Hull House in Chicago an example of? (Points: 5) an urban hotel for women only a political machine that operated to benefit immigrants a settlement house opened to assist the urban poor a skyscraper that changed the look of the city 7. What is one reason that the Populist Party failed? (Points: 5) Populists promoted an economy that did not regulate business. Populists pushed for a change in the tax structure. Populists looked to the past and did not develop an agenda for an industrial economy. Populists neglected present needs in favor of future plans. 8. Which turn of the century political movement emphasized conservation? (Points: 5) Republican Democratic Populist Progressive 9. Who were the muckrakers? (Points: 5) political party members who practiced dirty politics people who cleared the land before skyscrapers were built the first gossip columnists, especially those who focused on politicians investigative journalists who uncovered corruption in business and government 10. What was not examined by the investigative journalists in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries? (Points: 5) brutal working conditions in mines and on railroads John D. Rockefeller's corrupt practices at Standard Oil violations in the meatpacking industry long hours required of sharecropping farmers 11. Why did the Progressive movement want the direct election of senators? (Points: 5) Senators elected indirectly made little effort to represent the people. Progressives believed that having representatives elected by state legislatures was sufficient. Progressives believed that direct election of senators gave more control of government to the people. Progressives wanted to eliminate the Electoral College in all elections except presidential ones. 12. Which president oversaw the building of the Panama Canal, emphasized conservation, and established some national parks? (Points: 5) Woodrow Wilson William McKinley Theodore Roosevelt William Howard Taft 13. What was one element of Woodrow Wilson's "New Freedom" agenda? (Points: 5) establishing the United Nations reducing farm subsidies eliminating monopolies implementing the Food and Drug Act 14. How did Jim Crow laws, poll taxes, and literacy tests affect blacks in the period following the Civil War? (Points: 5) They promoted economic independence for freed slaves. They helped make it possible for blacks to vote. They promoted segregation and denied blacks their rights. They had little effect on blacks. 15. Which Supreme Court decision allowed for the segregation of blacks in "separate but equal" facilities? (Points: 5) Marbury v. Madison Brown v. Board of Education Plessy v. Fergusthats not all of it...........more here http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090611205142AAx9bXF1- d 2- A 3- B 4- C 5- A 6- C 7- ? 8- ? 9- d 10- b 11- B 12- d 13- c 14- B 15- a more

Resolved Question: Do you think there is...?

parallel structure in this paragraph? If so, where? (note: this is not a test or hw question...it WAS from a test but I do believe there was an error in the answer key..I'm not saying my opinion yet though...I want to see what you think). In each of the cases, minors of the Negro race, through their legal representatives, seek the aid of the courts in obtaining admission to the public schools of their community on a nonsegregated basis. In each instance, [347 U.S. 483, 488] they had been denied admission to schools attended by white children under laws requiring or permitting segregation according to race. This segregation was alleged to deprive the plaintiffs of the equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment. In each of the cases other than the Delaware case, a three-judge federal district court denied relief to the plaintiffs on the so-called "separate but equal" doctrine announced by this Court in Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 . Under that doctrine, equality of treatment is accorded when the races are provided substantially equal facilities, even though these facilities be separate. In the Delaware case, the Supreme Court of Delaware adhered to that doctrine, but ordered that the plaintiffs be admitted to the white schools because of their superiority to the Negro schools. more

Voting Question: Do you know any of these?

1) The Supreme Court case Plessy v. Ferguson a) had little effect on the Jim Crow laws b) ended the debate on Reconstruction c) initiated the concept of "separate but equal" d) ended the practice of "separate but equal for a short time" 2) One of the reasons sharecropping became a way of life in the South was: a) it had so many advantages for the sharecroppers b) the rural Southern economy was so ridden with debt, it was difficult for people to get out of it c) when it was set up as a reform, by the Freedman's Bureau, it was meant to be a helpful economic measure d) that the Radicals used it to punish former Confederates 3) At the beginning of the Civil War: (I've narrowed it to these 2...) c) the South had a slight advantage in military training, naval equiptment and know-how d) the North had a clear advantage in manpower and industrial strength If you could please help, that'd be awesome. Thank you! more

Resolved Question: History Help Please 2 questions Muliple choice?

1. In 1896, the Supreme Court ruled in the case _______________ that separate but equal public facilities were legal. a. King v. Southern Christian Leadership Conference b. McCain v. Woolworth Incorporated c. Plessy v. Ferguson d. Brown v. Board of Education 2. The Watts riots were NOT a result of ______. a. Bad schools b. High jobless rate in the inner city c. Poor housing d. Segregated city transportation more

Resolved Question: those question for who is smart in US history.?

that's school home work, and try to give right answer, thank you. 14. Which leader founded a vocational training institution in the late 1800s to improve economic opportunities for African Americans? 1.George Washington Carver 2.Frederick Douglass 3.W. E. B. Du Bois 4.Booker T. Washington 15. Following the Civil War, many Southern states enacted Black Codes to 1.provide free farmland for African Americans 2.guarantee equal civil rights for African Americans 3.restrict the rights of formerly enslaved persons 4.support the creation of the Freedmen's Bureau 16. In the ten years following the Civil War, a large numbers of former slaves earned a living by becoming 1.conductors on the Underground Railroad 2.workers in Northern factories 3.sharecroppers on Southern farms 4.gold miners in California 17. The passage of the Dawes Act in 1887 was primarily an attempt by the United States government to 1.limit the power of the Bureau of Indian Affairs 2.return eastern land to Native American Indian tribes 3.encourage Native American Indians to give up their traditional cultures 4.hire Native American Indians as military scouts 18. The Supreme Court decision in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) had a major impact on the lives of African Americans because it ruled that 1.segregation was illegal in educational institutions 2.voting was a right guaranteed by the Constitution 3.separate but equal public facilities were legal 4.military occupation of the South was unconstitutional 19. What effect did the system of sharecropping have on the South after the Civil War? 1.It kept formerly enslaved persons economically dependent. 2.It brought investment capital to the South. 3.It encouraged Northerners to migrate south. 4.It provided for a fairer distribution of farm profits. 20. In the 1800s, the Great Plains region of the United States was characterized primarily by 1.exceptionally high amounts of annual rainfall 2.heavily wooded forests covering most of the area 3.an extensive system of navigable rivers 4.vast expanses of native grasses 21. A goal of the Granger and Populist movements was to 1.expand rights for African Americans 2.help western farmers fight unjust economic practices 3.provide support for the banking industry 4.enable big business to expand without government interference 22. During the late 1800s, what was the main reason why labor unions had difficulty achieving gains for workers? 1.Communists had taken control of the major unions. 2.The government supported business efforts to limit the powers of unions. 3.Most unions had been organized by big business. 4.Most workers were satisfied with working conditions. 23. In the late 1800s, the Granger movement tried to improve conditions for farmers by 1.lowering the rate of inflation 2.strengthening the gold standard 3.forcing railroads to lower their rates 4.making labor unions stronger 24. The slogan "Eight hours for work, eight hours for sleep, eight hours for what we will" was used in the late 1800s to promote a major goal of 1.farmers 2.politicians 3.industrialists 4.organized labor 25. The Homestead Act of 1862 helped the development of the West by 1.providing free land to settlers 2.granting land for construction of transcontinental railroads 3.allowing slavery to spread to the territories 4.placing Native American Indians on reservations 26. Between 1880 and 1900, most immigrants coming to the United States settled in the cities along the east coast because 1.many factory jobs were available in the East 2.little farmland remained to be settled in the Midwest 3.most immigrants came from the cities of Europe 4.city laws afforded special rights and protections for immigrants 27. The Populist movement was most interested in improving conditions for 1.farmers 2.business leaders 3.African Americans 4.Native American Indians 28. During the late 1800s, industrialization in the United States led to 1.the growth of the middle class 2.an overall decline in labor union membership 3.the creation of affirmative action programs 4.a decrease in the use of natural resources 29. In the 19th century, protective tariffs, subsidies for railroads, and open immigration showed that the federal government followed a policy of 1.support for economic development 2.noninterference in the free-market system 3.regulation of unfair business practices 4.support for organized labor 30. Why did the United States follow a policy of open immigration during much of the 1800s? 1.Many United States citizens wanted to live abroad. 2.The United States had a shortage of labor. 3.Prosperous conditions in Europe resulted in fewer immigrants coming to the United States. 4.Immigrants provided United States industry with investment capital. 31. During the late 19th century, which p more

Resolved Question: social studies help please?

Base your answer to the question on the quotation below and on your knowledge of social studies. . . . There may come a time when we elect a president at age 45 or 50, and then 20 years later the country comes up with the same sort of problems that the president faced before and the people would like to bring that man or woman back, and they’d have no ability to do so. I’d kind of like to see it changed. I don’t have terribly strong feelings about it. . . . — President Bill Clinton, A Conversation with Former President Bill Clinton, John F. Kennedy Library and Foundation, May 28, 2003 In this statement, President Clinton is commenting on the a. presidential primaries b. presidential two-term limit c. two-party political system d. electoral college system Which argument was used by the Supreme Court in reaching its “clear and present danger” ruling in Schenck v. United States (1919)? a. The military is under civilian control. b. Powers are separated between the federal and state governments. c. Constitutional rights are not absolute. d. The Constitution provides for equal protection under the laws Which group was the main target of the Palmer Raids of 1919–1920 and the McCarthy hearings of the 1950s? a. nativists b. industrialists c. communists d. African Americans “President Jackson Signs Force Bill Against South Carolina” “Congress Declares Southern States Must Accept 14th Amendment” “President Eisenhower Sends Federal Troops to Little Rock, Arkansas” Which principle is illustrated by these headlines? a. executive privilege b. popular sovereignty c. limited government d. federal supremacy more

Voting Question: What was a major impact of the development of computers in the 1950s?

They provided improved accuracy in billing and payments. They were too expensive for most consumers. They were mainly used by the government and the military. They increased the speed of communication much as the telegraph did in the nineteenth century. 23. Which was not an impact that television had on society in the1950s? (Points: 3) It promoted the development of a common culture. It communicated the notion that affluence was widespread. It provided families with inexpensive news and entertainment. It became an educational tool in classrooms. 24. What did the addition of "under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance and adopting "in God we trust" as the national motto indicate about life in the 1950s? (Points: 3) that people were grateful for victory in World War II that the televangelists were more influential than Congressthat that there was a religious resurgence that separation of church and state was not important 25. What was one reason for the pressure to conform in the 1950s? (Points: 3) Postwar recovery seemed to hinge on people doing what was expected. Women had become part of the work environment and needed role definition. McCarthyism promoted the idea that being different was cause for suspicion. Newspapers and books publicized trends and advocated following them. 26. What contributed significantly to John F. Kennedy's election to the presidency? (Points: 3) televised debates religious intervention a weak opponent his experience as vice president 27. John F. Kennedy said, "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country." How did these words affect young voters? (Points: 3) They inspired young people to participate in working for their country. They quickly approved higher taxes. They caused young people to begin questioning what the United States meant to them. They resented the request and avoided public service. 28. Why did civil rights become even more important to African Americans following World War II? (Points: 3) Jim Crow laws still prevented blacks from full participation in American life. Separate but equal schools worked well in some places, but not in others. Blacks were receiving equal pay for their work so they wanted equality in other areas, too. They saw sophisticated, affluent black families on TV and wanted that life for themselves. 29. Which event played an important part in the civil rights movement? (Points: 3) riots in Watts, Detroit, and Newark Rosa Parks leading a march on Birmingham Freedom rides to Washington, D.C. a march from Little Rock to Montgomery 30. Which civil rights advocate became a Supreme Court justice? (Points: 3) Clarence Thomas Medgar Evers James Meredith Thurgood Marshall 31. What was the title of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s famous document explaining his philosophy? (Points: 3) The Table of Brotherhood Letter from Birmingham Jail Poor People's Campaign Selma Voting Rights Address 32. How did the civil rights movement change in the late '60s? (Points: 3) Many black leaders began to take a more militant approach to civil rights. Congress passed additional laws to remove loopholes. As more laws were passed, their provisions were more easily implemented. White leaders joined black leaders in persuading whites to join the movement 33. What were the key provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964? (Points: 3) providing fair housing creating equal pay eliminating segregation in public accommodations eliminating voter discrimination 36. What actions did Lyndon Johnson take to provide for the needs of the poor and elderly? (Points: 3) created a new federal welfare initiative provided remedial education programs established Medicare and Medicaid changed the age at which people are eligible for social security more

Resolved Question: Can you answer this please?

Finals are coming up and Civics in not my subject at all. Can you all please help me with the study guide. It is true/false and I have answered some of them. If they are wrong, please correct me. 1.When the president appoints federal judges, approval must be given by a majority vote in the senate. 2.Local governments have authority over school and libraries, sewage systems and public utilities. 3.Making a convicted person's sentence less severe is Commutation 4.Under the council-manager plan of government, the city manager is appointed by the city council. 5.The Supreme Court rules that marriage was one of the "fundamental rights" of life, liberty, and property protected by the 5th and 14th Amendments in its decision on Nixon v. United States 6.The 1801 decision in Marbury v. Madison gave the Supreme Court the power to declare the following things "unconstitutional": A law passed by Congress, A law passed by a state and a President's action. 7. The Supreme Court's 1954 decision in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka suggested that Segregation laws were unconstitutional. 8. People who are represented by members of a lawmaking body are Constituents. 9.A written plan of government is the Constitution 10.The branches of government are able to regulate power amongst themselves through a system of checks and balances. 11.All of the following are blue collar jobs: Auto mechanic, Plumber, and Janitor. 12.The religious separatists were known as the Puritans. 13.The power to call a special session of Congress is an example of Executive over Legislative. 14. The Supreme Court declared that "Jim Crow Laws" requiring separate but equal facilities for white and black Americans in public places were legal when it ruled in Plessy v. Ferguson. 15. Diplomacy is the practice or skill of conducting negotiations. 16.The process of drawing congressional district lines to favor a political party is Gerrymandering. 17.Expansionism is expanding your country by taking over other nations. 18.States have the power to establish marriage laws. 19.Meeting of party leaders to determine party policy or to choose the party's candidates for public office are Caucuses. 20.A limit on the debate of a bill in the senate is cloture. 21.All local governments in a state are established by the State Legislature. 22.The main departments and agencies at all levels of government is Bureaucracy. 23.The governor's power to reject only one part of a money bill is called an item veto.-True 24.Congress can override a presidential veto to pass a law. 25.If the people do not like the effects of an amendment it can be repealed or canceled. 26.The type of government in which one person or small group holds all the power is known as a Totalitarian. 27.A sphere of influence is an area where a nation has a high level of power. 28.According to a study by the U.S. department of Labor, jobs are expected to have the largest growth are in Healthcare and computers. 29.***Describe how the separation of powers allows the branches of government to check and balance each other *****Explain the connection between the Supreme Court Decision of Plessy v. Ferguson and Brown v. Board of Education. Discuss the key ideas of each. Explain why these two cases are so important in the history of Civil Rights in America. 30.The jobs of factory workers today are being replaced by machines. 31.A person has been arrested and questioned by the police before being informed of his or her rights. This is a violation of the Supreme Court Ruling in Miranda v. Arizona. 32.An official who works to promote U.S. commercial interests in a foreign country is a Consul. 33.Postpones the carrying out of a person's sentence Reprieve. 34.A clothing manufactures and hair salons are both a part of the service industry. 35.The power to declare the President's action unconstitutional is an example of Judicial over Executive. 36.Domino Theory is the idea that is one country fell to communism the others in the region would also. 37.In most states, traffic violations and family disputes are heard in Circuit Courts. 38.The Supreme Court's power of judicial review-to a declare a law unconstitutional-was established in its ruling on the case of Marbury v. Madison. 39.Three officials in county government are the Sheriff, clerk, and treasurer. 40.The most important step in deciding on a career is getting to know yourself.-True 41.An arms race is a military race between nations to develop the best weapons. 42.When the President veto’s a bill passed by Congress, it is an example of: Executive over Judicial.-True 43.A government that consists of two parts, or houses mean bicameral.-True 44.The full faith and credit clause appears in the US. Constitution-False 45.Even after the Civil Rights movement brought historic changes in laws separating black and whites in school, public fafyi:to people who think that i am trying to get them to do my homework, YOUR WRONG! I don't have a textbook because my teacher took it up. And it says that Civics is not my subject. I just don't understand it. Instead of putting me down, how about helping me so I can go to college and become something to make this world better!fyi:to people who think that i am trying to get them to do my homework, YOUR WRONG! I don't have a textbook because my teacher took it up. And it says that Civics is not my subject. I just don't understand it. Instead of putting me down, how about helping me so I can go to college and become something to make this world better! more

Resolved Question: Which Supreme Court case established a legal basis for segregation, under the concept of "separate but equal"?

A. Marbury v. Madison B. Miller v. California C. Plessy v. Ferguson D. Brown v. Board od Education more

Resolved Question: How Does Religion Have a Monopoly on "Marriage" and Since When is the US a Theocracy?

How can the US government make laws that discriminate against a group of people based on their sexual orientation and based on a RELIGIOUS belief? How Does Religion Have a Monopoly on "Marriage" and Since When is the US a Theocracy? Isn't that the same as discriminating against someone based on their ethnicity/ skin color? What's next, will the US make interracial marriage illegal? Will the US make marriage between people of two different religions illegal? Maybe blondes won't be able to marry brunettes? or blue eyed people can't marry green eyed people? Didn't the US Supreme Court rule that Separate is NOT equal? What's MORE invasive than a Government that tells you who you can or cannot marry? Why can't our GOVERNMENT recognize the marriage of two consenting adults, regardless or ethnicity, religious creed, gender or sexual orientation and grant them EQUAL rights and EQUAL protection under the law, and say to Hell with religion? Our elected officials put their hands on the Bible and swore to uphold the US CONSTITUTION (you know, Life, Liberty, Pursuit of Happiness. ALL men are created equal, all that good stuff...), they did NOT place their hands on the Constitution and swear to uphold the Bible.Locke, Religion had EVERYTHING to do with Prop 8 passing in California. There were various misleading/ attacking ads funded by various religious organizations. It's pretty much common knowledge. Nice try though.Edit: Joseph, the battle rages on and will end only once LGBT marriage is recognized as equal, will it be over.Proud, Liberals do NOT want to eliminate religion, we just want our government to make decisions based on LAW, not Biblical law. Not everyone subscribes to Christianity, Islam, Judaism, etc. so NONE of our laws should be based on laws from those religions because that can only lead to discrimination against other religions. Our Forefathers didn't see fit to make SLAVERY illegal, so maybe you think that's okay too? The Brilliance of our US Constitution is that it can be Amended to fit the times. more

Resolved Question: Civil War and Reconstruction help!?

1). In the Dred Scott decision, the Supreme Court ruled that slavery a. was a blot on our national character b. could be allowed in the territories c. violated the fifth amendment d. should be ended by Congress (I am pretty sure it's either a or d) 2) With the fall of Vicksburg, Union forces a. gained control of the Mississippi River b. proved the value of ironclad ships c. showed the black soldiers could fight d. controlled all southern ports 3).Under Congressional Reconstruction, political power in the south shifted to a. white southern democrats b. former slaves and whites who had been loyal to the United States c. former Confederate leaders d. the Klu Klux Klan 4). The Klu Klux Klan and similar terrorist groups were formed in the South to a. clean up corruption and incompetence in government b. were segregated in public places c. had to pay for children's schooling d. were taxed into poverty 5). Which statement is not true of the Compromise of 1877? a. It began with a disputed election b. It sent more federal troops to the South c. It made Rutherford B. Hayes president d. It marked the end of Reconstruction 6). The purpose of the Jim Crow laws passed by southern Democrats was to a. draw a line between blacks and whites in public life b. make sure that blacks and whites had separate but equal facilities c. keep unqualified African Americans from voting d. encourage African Americans to migrate of the SouthThis is the wrong #4. #4 is: The Klu Klux Klan and similar terrorist groups were formed in the South to a.) clean up corruption and incompetence in government b.) protect white southerners from ruthless carpet baggers and scalawags c). return white Democrats to power in every southern state d). protect the rights of black voters and officials more

Resolved Question: Please Help With United States History!?

6. After watching television coverage of the brutal tactics used against protesters by the Birmingham police, even opponents of the Civil Rights Movement were (1 point) appalled by the police violence. angry with the peaceful protesters. supportive of the actions of the police. uninterested in the confrontation. 7. Essayist James Baldwin wrote about the (1 point) white viewpoint on civil rights. benefits of a segregated society. effectiveness of sit-ins. violent consequences of segregation. 8. The Black Panthers wanted African Americans to (1 point) end the urban riots. lead their own communities. practice nonviolent protest. join interracial groups. 9. During the 1960 presidential campaign, John F. Kennedy promised to (1 point) win the Cold War against the Soviet Union. cut back dramatically on military spending. get the American economy moving again. abolish the electoral college. 10. What was the intent of the Immigration Act of 1965, which was passed during the Johnson administration? (1 point) to increase the number of immigrants from northern and western Europe to eliminate quotas restricting immigration from certain countries to reduce the total annual number of immigrants to the United States to stem the flow of political refugees to the United States 11. Kennedy believed that he could encourage stability in Latin America by (1 point) promoting economic development. cooperating with Communist governments. supporting popular revolutions. ending social-reform programs. 12. The Equal Rights Amendment passed Congress in 1972 and then (1 point) was vetoed by the President. was approved by the Supreme Court. became law 10 years later. failed in the ratification process. 13. In the 1960s, Mexican Americans fought discrimination in (1 point) cultural and religious matters. labor unions. professional sports. jobs, education, and legal matters. 14. A major theme of the book Silent Spring, which helped start the Environmental Movement, was that (1 point) human beings are superior to the nature around them. human beings and nature are separate but equal. human beings and nature are separate and unequal. humans are part of nature, and all parts of nature interact. 15. Why did South Vietnamese military leaders overthrow Diem? (1 point) He had joined the Communists. He had lost American support. He had tried to flee Saigon. He had converted to Buddhism. more

Resolved Question: After World War II Help?

1. The generation of babies born between 1946 and 1964 became known as "baby boomers" because of the dramatic increase in the number of births. True False 2. The House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) investigated what type of organizations? African American international student fascist and communist 3. Who was found guilty of and executed for giving atomic secrets to the Soviets in 1950? Alger Hiss Julius and Ethel Rosenberg Joseph McCarthy John F. Kennedy 4. What was the ruling of the Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court case of 1896? that segregation of blacks and whites was unconstitutional that the segregation of men and women was constitutional that separate facilities for immigrants and American citizens was unconstitutional that separate facilities for blacks and whites were permitted if they were equal 5. Brown v. Board of Education eventually resulted in the segregation of public schools. the integration of private universities. the segregation of public universities. the intergation of public schools. 6. This individual refused to give up a seat on a city bus in Montgomery, Alabama, challenging segregation. Rosa Parks Martin Luther King, Jr. Malcolm X Linda Brown 7. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 guaranteed equal access to employment and public places. True False 8. What group believed there would have to be an armed revolution in order to gain full rights for African Americans? the Nation of Islam the Freedom Riders the Little Rock Nine the Black Panthers 9. Lyndon Johnson's plan for domestic improvement was known as the Great Society. the New Frontier. the New Deal. the Civil Rights Movement. 10. The Supreme Court decision of Roe v. Wade prohibits women from having an abortion. True False more

Resolved Question: America After World War II?

1. The generation of babies born between 1946 and 1964 became known as "baby boomers" because of the dramatic increase in the number of births. True False 2. The House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) investigated what type of organizations? African American international student fascist and communist 3. Who was found guilty of and executed for giving atomic secrets to the Soviets in 1950? Alger Hiss Julius and Ethel Rosenberg Joseph McCarthy John F. Kennedy 4. What was the ruling of the Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court case of 1896? that segregation of blacks and whites was unconstitutional that the segregation of men and women was constitutional that separate facilities for immigrants and American citizens was unconstitutional that separate facilities for blacks and whites were permitted if they were equal 5. Brown v. Board of Education eventually resulted in the segregation of public schools. the integration of private universities. the segregation of public universities. the intergation of public schools. 6. This individual refused to give up a seat on a city bus in Montgomery, Alabama, challenging segregation. Rosa Parks Martin Luther King, Jr. Malcolm X Linda Brown 7. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 guaranteed equal access to employment and public places. True False 8. What group believed there would have to be an armed revolution in order to gain full rights for African Americans? the Nation of Islam the Freedom Riders the Little Rock Nine the Black Panthers 9. Lyndon Johnson's plan for domestic improvement was known as the Great Society. the New Frontier. the New Deal. the Civil Rights Movement. 10. The Supreme Court decision of Roe v. Wade prohibits women from having an abortion. True False more

Resolved Question: A good point in support of gay marriage and why we shouldn't even be having this debate in the first place!?

Ok, this isn't really a question but i just wanted to make a point that I feel has not been emphasized enough by pro-gay marriage ppl on the news. My point is that in 1896, the Supreme Court made a landmark decision in Plessy v Ferguson allowing segregation of public facilities based on the idea of "separate but equal." However, that ruling was later overturned by Brown v Board of Education which ruled that separate was inherently unequal, and as a result segregation ended. Based on this, gay marriage should therefore be perfectly legal. Even if all states allowed civil unions w/ equal benefits, protections as marriage, this is still a form of SEGREGATION (i.e. separate but equal!) Why don't ppl pay attention to these Supreme Court cases and realize that we shouldn't even be having this debate! Brown v Board of Education (whose ruling was based on the 14th Amendment of the Constitution) already made it clear that segregation is inequality. Gay marriage is just like the issue of segregation, and Brown v Board already solved segregation, so gay marriage should be recognized! And its not like there is a legitimate reason against gay marriage that isn't religious anyway. What do you think? (I hope what i said makes sense) more

Resolved Question: How is interracial marriage and same sex marriage the same?

Marrying a member of the same gender is not the same as marrying a person of a different race because race and gender are not parallel, they’re not the same and here’s why. There is no difference between a white human and a black human’s psyche, but there are immense differences between a man and a woman’s psyche. Men and women are equal but not the same. If you are attracted to men and not women (regardless of your gender) you notice that men and women are not the same too, if you are attracted to women and not men (regardless of your gender) you notice that men and women are not the same also. A lot of these traditional marriage beliefs also have to do with children. People who are against same-sex marriage, believe children should think when they grow up they will get married, they should not have to think, am I going to marry a boy or a girl? Children today face enough sexual confusion without adding that. When it comes to raising children, most people who are pro traditional marriage believe that two men can not replace 1 good mother’s role in a (boy or girl) child’s development, and believe two women can not replace 1 good father’s role in a (boy or girl) child’s development. I don’t think two men could replace my mother and give me the things my mother gave me, and I don’t think two women could replace my father and give me the things my father gave me, and that’s how most of the people who are against gay marriage feel. Thinking men and women both have different, but equally important qualities, is legit. The argument is some homosexuals believe in same sex marriage, since gays are discriminated against they feel we should redefine marriage, because they feel it is their civil right to have their relationships honored in the law, they use Loving vs. Virginia (the 1967 supreme court case where interracial marriage was legalized) as a point of reference, and they feel not giving it to them is a violation of their civil rights, but the same argument could be said for Muslims and polygamy. Some Muslims believe in polygamy, since Muslims are discriminated against should we redefine marriage to where polygamy is legal for consenting adults, because they feel it is their civil right to have their relationships honored in the law, they use Loving vs. Virginia as a point of reference, and they feel not giving it to them is a violation of their civil rights? When people use the separate but equal Loving vs. Virgina case, as an argument to pervert the definition of marriage of man and wife, to man and man or woman and woman, what’s to stop people from using the same argument to deviate further to man, woman and woman or woman, man and man? The legitimacy of the arguments heterosexuals and homosexuals, have against polygamy in consenting adults, are equivalent to the legitimacy of arguments heterosexuals who are against same sex marriage have. Heterosexuals who are against same sex marriage can be labeled hateful bigots, and as having an irrational fear of homosexuals (homophobic) and by the same logic, the same way, homosexuals and heterosexuals who do not support polygamy can be labeled hateful bigots, and as having an irrational fear of polygamists, the labels in both cases are equivalent in their validity or lack thereof. There was a church in California covered on CNN that gay protesters were going after because they would not marry 2 homosexuals, a couple months before prop 8 passed. People that are against same sex marriage recognize that if gay marriage is legalized in the United States nationwide, Church’s will be legally required to marry gay couples or they can be sued, loose their licenses and loose their tax exempt status. Teacher’s who teach Human development will be legally required to include gay sex in their curriculum, even if they don’t believe in it, or they’ll loose their job, both instances would be reprehensible. People say same sex marriage is none of straight people’s business, but both of those cases are very much the business of heterosexuals. For those of you who want to just resort to name calling and personal insults, (because I present a respectful, civil, and legitimate argument) without articulating a response, just leave your stupid comment and move on.This is adressing a slanted opinion Judith D, if you read the whole thing you would realize this has to do with the future of everyoneNo church has been forced to marry homosexuals. You can get a license in court. The issue was that they denied business for a commitment ceremony, not a marriage. because It hasn't been legalized nationwide yetIf you bring up the argument of children... you are might as well ban having children outside of marriage, because you're saying the exact same thing. I never suggested banning having children outside of marriage, you didYou're against the relationship itself, that's your problem and why you are a bigot. You might as well make being gay illegal... which you can't do, since sex of any type between two consenting adults is their own business. Your putting words in my mouth just the way you put artificial facts in your head"If you're neighbors were gay, how would it make any difference to you if they were married or not." Once again I did not suggest that you didI mentioned marriage not the unmarried"People use the same arguments against interracial marriage that were used 50 years ago. (God didn't intend the races to mix... to be short... the argument was)" and you are using the same argument muslims who believe in poligamy can use, I notice you ignore most of the post that refutes your Loving vs. Virginia argument“A lot of your points are simply unsupported” by homosexuals “In my view, marriage should be between two consenting adults, preferably those who actually love each other. Take all the religious aspects out of gay marriage and make it a union.” That is your view “3. Gays cannot propagate: First off, we are decreasing in fertility rates as determined by the availability of resources. People will mate with a lot of resources and won't when resources are limited. By 2050, the population is expected to reach about 9 to 11 billion people. “ “We need less people to mate.“ What you’re suggesting is counterproductive to the human race “Furthermore, should all other heterosexuals who can't mate such as steril individuals or people with deleterious genes (such as Huntingtons) be prohibited from marriage? We allow those people to freely marry even if there would be a problem with their genes.” I never suggested all heterosexuals who can't mate such as steril individuals orpeople with deleterious genes (such as Huntingtons) be prohibited from marriage, you did “3. Gays cannot be an ideal family: The divorce rates in this country are up to 50 percent. Until we make marriage permanent, then citing anything that gays cannot make as good of a family as a straight family is ridiculous.” Ridiculous to you, and people who share your skewed views and demands “4. Gays will ruin the sanctity of marriage: What about Anna Nicole, Britney Spears, Bristol Palin...what are the legitimacies of their marriages or near marriages? And for that fact, how will someone elses marriage “ When the definition of marriage is changed it is not just the gay definition, it’s the definition for everyone in the united states “ruin your marriage?” There was no mention of “ruin” in my postUltimately, gays just want to be recognized and receive all the benefits that heterosexual couples receive. They don't want to ruin your marriage. Fine, call it civil unions and not marriage, my marriage is between a man and a woman, and they are trying to pervert that “They don't want to make laws making people marry animals.” How is polygamy between consenting human adults, related to animals? And when did I mention animals?“You were talking about a commitment ceremony, which all they wanted to do was lease the land their church owned, which they do to hetero couples as well, the problem was they broke a law by denying them because they were gay. A Catholic church can refuse to marry someone of a different belief, no one is forcing ANY church to marry anyone.” That should still be a violation of the freedom of religion “You can't tell me it's okay for people to be gay and you simply don't want them to be married. You'd be lying if you don't approve of their relationship.” (Once again I did not suggest that you did) And you could actually share what you think there instead of saying that's not what you suggested, though whether two people are married or not doesn't change how you live your life.” So since you don’t believe in polygamy in consenting adults, does that make you bigoted against Muslims who believe in polygamy?“Loving v. Virginia was deemed unconstitutional due to restriction on race. My point is that your religion does not make the laws of a secular nation. Just because your god doesn't approve of something, doesn't mean you're going to impede on the rights of others. That's exactly why slavery existed. It was okay, because we never gave them rights in the first place. Our God never approved of enslaving another race, our God never disapproved of interracial marriage, people did. ”The rights of a minority should never be voted on by the majority.” Christians are not considered minorities but Muslims are considered minorities, And once again you ignore how I pointed out that race and gender are not the sameSeparate is not equal, we already know that. The real problem is that we are a secular nation, not a theocracy. Your religion doesn't make our laws. That's what you're talking about when you say perversion. So are boy scouts and girls scouts separate but equal as well? When I say pervert, I mean the dictionary definition of “to lead astray” “Maybe you just don't want to drink from the same water fountain as gays, so you rather give them a separate water fountain.” That’s laughable, considering I never said that, and what would you know about drinking from a separate fountain?“Race and gender are not the same, but sexism and racism are both bigotry. Christians are the majority by numbers, but as I said, the majority doesn't get to make whatever laws they please to enforce on everyone else.” I made a point by saying I think men and women both have different, but equally important qualities, you are trying to say that either man or woman is not important, so by your logic, it is you were are sexist and by the same logic, in all fairness, you must believe Muslims who believe in polygamy should be able have polygamy legalized in the untied states, otherwise you are a hypocrite. So suddenly your marriage is not special to you anymore because gays can marry too? And no, boy scouts and girl scouts are not equal, boy scouts don't allow gays and atheists into their organization. Gay’s can not nationally marry yet, and so your saying any type of club just for men, where there is the same type of club for just for women is separate but not equal?”Just seems to me you think if you're sharing something with people who you deem as less than yourself somehow ruins it for you.” Well it seems to me that you don’t know your @ss from you elbow, especially when you bring up drinking from a “gays” only fountain, or being made to sit in the front or the back of the bus for that matter. I still bet you can't honestly say it's okay for someone to be gay, just not okay for them to marry. Being gay is your choice, it’s your right, gay’s don’t “marry” because under the definition it is marriage is still a union between a man and a woman It took you and hour and a half to come up with that crap?I still bet you can't honestly say it's okay for Muslims to practice polygamy legally in the United StatesI'm willing to share marriage as it is defined, so if you want to marry someone of the opposite sex, i'm all for it more

Resolved Question: Giving (10 points) to the people who answer the questions, Thank you?

True/False 1. The generation of babies born between 1946 and 1964 became known as "baby boomers" because of the dramatic increase in the number of births. (1 point) True False 2. The House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) investigated what type of organizations? (1 point) African American international student fascist and communist 3. Who was found guilty of and executed for giving atomic secrets to the Soviets in 1950? (1 point) Alger Hiss Julius and Ethel Rosenberg Joseph McCarthy John F. Kennedy 4. What was the ruling of the Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court case of 1896? (1 point) that segregation of blacks and whites was unconstitutional that the segregation of men and women was constitutional that separate facilities for immigrants and American citizens was unconstitutional that separate facilities for blacks and whites were permitted if they were equal 5. Brown v. Board of Education eventually resulted in (1 point) the segregation of public schools. the integration of private universities. the segregation of public universities. the intergation of public schools. 6. This individual refused to give up a seat on a city bus in Montgomery, Alabama, challenging segregation. (1 point) Rosa Parks Martin Luther King, Jr. Malcolm X Linda Brown True/False 7. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 guaranteed equal access to employment and public places. (1 point) True False 8. What group believed there would have to be an armed revolution in order to gain full rights for African Americans? (1 point) the Nation of Islam the Freedom Riders the Little Rock Nine the Black Panthers 9. Lyndon Johnson's plan for domestic improvement was known as (1 point) the Great Society. the New Frontier. the New Deal. the Civil Rights Movement. True/False 10. The Supreme Court decision of Roe v. Wade prohibits women from having an abortion. (1 point) True False more

Resolved Question: social studies help? pleaseeee?

Which economic concept is best described as a rise in prices with a decrease in the value of money? (1) inflation (3) depression (2) recession (4) deflation Which Supreme Court case declared the “separate but equal” doctrine unconstitutional? (1) Plessy v. Ferguson (2) Brown v. Board of Education (3) Miranda v. Arizona (4) Roe v. Wade What is the main economic system of the United States? (1) mercantilism (3) socialism (2) communism (4) capitalism Which New Deal legislation continues to play a significant role in American life? (1) Agricultural Adjustment Act (2) Federal Emergency Relief Act (3) National Industrial Recovery Act (4) Social Security Act Which statement is best supported by the information presented in the pie charts? (1) The percentage of Americans over age 65 will increase. (2) The percentage of African Americans in the population will decrease. (3) The population of the United States will become more diverse. (4) The need to learn a second language will decrease more

Resolved Question: How can the US Supreme Court declare a marriage law in a particular state unconstitutional?

I just saw a post in which someone claimed that the gays voted for Obama, because he would appoint Supreme Court justices who would uphold state laws legalizing same-sex marriage. How can federal Supreme Court justices declare any marriage laws in any of the states unconstitutional, though, since the Constitution doesn't in any way deal with the issue of marriage? I know that some may bring up the case of Loving v. Virginia, but that was different, since some years before, the Supreme Court had ruled that the "separate but equal" treatment of the races was unconstitutional. more

Resolved Question: History Help Please i need help no haters?

. What phrase describes the treatment blacks received in the years before World War II? (Points: 1) separate but equal integrated and equal separate and unequal integrated but unequal 2. Which was not a hardship African Americans experienced in the years preceding World War II? (Points: 1) segregation in schools discrimination in employment and housing difficulty voting problems marrying one another 3. What were blacks hoping for following their service in World War II? (Points: 1) separate but equal schools an end to Jim Crow laws more opportunities for military service farm subsidies for sharecroppers 4. What is one way that life changed for many black Americans following World War II? (Points: 1) The lure of jobs took many to the North. Farming in the South improved with better weather. Housing segregation began to end. Opportunities in the West increased migration there. 5. Whose actions did not challenge the racial status quo during the 1940s? (Points: 1) Harry Truman Thurgood Marshall Jackie Robinson Martin Luther King, Jr. 6. What organization worked to improve the situation for blacks in the 1940s? (Points: 1) Southern Christian Leadership Conference Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee The Black Panthers National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 7. What was the outcome of the Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education? (Points: 1) Blacks could attend white schools if they chose to. Racial culture in the South quickly changed. It declared that separate schools for blacks and whites were fundamentally unequal. It created a basis for the federal regulation and control of education. 8. What did blacks hope to gain by boycotting the buses in Montgomery, Alabama? (Points: 1) They wanted to see the fares go down so they could afford to ride. They thought they would be arrested and the publicity would help their cause. They hoped to use economic pressure to end segregation on the buses. They wanted the Montgomery Bus Company to begin transporting students to public schools. 9. Which is not an example of white resistance to desegregation? (Points: 1) stalling the efforts to integrate schools closing public schools and providing private school vouchers to white parents admitting only a few black students to white schools sending the poorest white students into black schools 10. How did the federal government respond when the governor of Arkansas refused to allow black students to enroll in Little Rock's Central High School? (Points: 1) President Eisenhower sent federal troops to escort and protect the students. The federal government deferred to the rights of the state. President Eisenhower met with the governor who then allowed the students to enroll. The federal government reminded the governor that admission was a decision for the local school system, not the state. more

Resolved Question: Any history people out there?

Supply the correct identification for each numbered description. 1. Term for making ruthless and unfair charges against opponents, such as those leveled by a red-hunting Wisconsin senator in the 1950s 2. Supreme Court ruling that overturned the old Plessy v. Ferguson principle that black public facilities could be “separate but equal” 3. The doctrine upon which Eisenhower and Dulles based American nuclear policy in the 1950s 4. An Asian alliance, set up by Secretary Dulls on the model of NATO, to help support the anticommunist regime in South Vietnam 5. The British-and-French-owned waterway whose nationalization by Egyptian President Nasser triggered a major Middle East crisis 6. A soviet scientific achievement that set off a wave of American concern about Soviet superiority in science and education 7. Major international corporation that symbolized the early computer and “information Age” 8. High-flying American spy plane, whose downing in 1960 destroyed a summit and heightened Cold War tensions 9. Latin American nation where a 1959 communist revolution ousted a U.S.-backed dictator 10. Betty Friedan’s 1963 book that launched a revolution against the suburban “cult of domesticity” that reigned in the 1950s THANK YOU!!! more

Resolved Question: History Question HELP!!!!!!!?

In the early 1960s, Birmingham, Alabama, was considered one of the South's most intergrated cities. True False Adults were the only ones who played an importnat role in the Civil Rights Movement. True False In 1896, the Supreme Court ruled in the case __________ that separate but equal public facilities were legal. Kinv. Southern Christian Leadership Conference McCain v. Woolworth Incorporated Plessy v. Ferguson Brown v. Board of Education Students used ________ as a method to desegregate lunch counters in more than 200 cities. Sit Ins Hunger Strike Freedom March Freedom Rides The policy of "separate but equal" ultimately violated the equal protection clause of which Amendment? 12th 13th 14th 18th Celebrated African American poet knownfor using his work to speak out aganist racism and injustice. W.E.B. DuBois Martin Luther King, Jr. Jackie Robinson Langston Hughes Known as the _______________ , these teenagers initially needed a military escort to attend classes in 1957. Greensboro Four Freedom Five Little Rock Nine Birmingham Ten Known as the first African American to break the barrier in major league baseball. Willie Mays Jackie Robinson Ronald Frye Micheal Jordan Appointed by President Eisenhower, this man was Chief Justice of the Supreme Court that decided in 1954 that school segregation was unconstitutional. Thurgood Marshall John H. Ferguson Homer Plessy Earl Warren Action of this person led to the Motgomery bus boycott in 1955. Rosa Parks Coretta Scott King Homer Plessy Franklin McCain Another name for the organized effort in 1961 to protest segregation in interstate travel. Bus boycott Freedom Rides Sit Ins CORE Riders This event probably had the most profound impact on the passage of Civil Rights Act of 1964. "Bloody Sunday" Freedom Rides March on Washington Watts Riots The march from Selma to Montgomery in 1965 was oragnized in supportof what cause? Voting rights of African Americans Desegregationof schools Desegregation of interstate travel Rigts of Sanitation workers in Alabama The Watts riots were NOT a result of ______. Bad schools High jobless rate in the inner city Poor housing Segregated city transportation more

Resolved Question: Does Yahoo Answers remove its content through a filtering program or by a person?

The reason that I'm asking is because I had an answer removed today that was perfectly in line with the question. The question itself however, was not a question but rather a statement. Specifically I answered a question stating just two examples of how the government has been bad in the past. About how they supported not only slavery (which fell apart from pressure from the northern states and the civil war), but segregation as well until Brown Vs. Board of Education overthrew a previous ruling by the supreme court which stated that separate but equal was constitutional. My answer was removed and I wanted to know whether it was because someone sitting there didn't like my answer after it was reported to whatever reason, or was it removed because of some kind of automatic word filter they have that simply saw the words "slavery" and "segregation" and decided that it was bad, regardless of the context. While I understand that they don't have the power to browse through every single question and answer, are they planning on doing anything to fix this obvious problem? more

Resolved Question: Christians, when a judge ruled this on marriage...?

...50 years ago. Was he right? "Almighty God created the races white, black, yellow, malay and red, and he placed them on separate continents. And but for the interference with his arrangement there would be no cause for such marriages. The fact that he separated the races show that he did not intend for the races to mix." 8 years later in an appeal, the US Supreme court ruled that laws banning interracial marriages violated the Equal Protection Clause. Now when you claim religious reasons for banning homosexual marriage? Is this not the same thing? Why should you enforce your view of God's morals on anyone else? If you really think God is going to punish them for their actions, why don't you just let God do it? Source: http://www.religioustolerance.org/hom_mar14.htm#miscIf you are saying it isn't traditional... People have opposed gay marriage saying the child could be ridiculed for their parents being different than most parents. Which is the same case that interracial couples and their children had (and still have to in places) go through. more

Resolved Question: Is the Iowa decision the beginning of the end for anti-Gay Marriage folks?

Separate but equal or unequal under the law are principles which seem to be on their way out (thankfully!). The unanimous supreme court decision in the heartland seems to signal the end of any legislated inequalities. What say you? more

Resolved Question: U.S. History Please Help?

For items 1-5, match each term with its description below. Type the letter of your answer choice in the box below each description. *You will NOT use all the terms. Roe v. Wade migrant farm worker National Organization for Women (NOW) Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) Latino Ralph Nader Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) American Indian Movement (AIM) counterculture Woodstock festival Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 1. group that fought for Native American treaty rights and self-government (1 point) 2. group that worked for compensation for Japanese Americans interned during World War II (1 point) 3. Spanish-speaking person from Latin America (1 point) 4. person who moves from farm to farm planting and harvesting crops (1 point) 5. law that would make discrimination based on a person’s sex illegal (1 point) Multiple Choice Choose the item that best completes the statement or answers the question. IDENTIFYING MAIN IDEAS 6. After watching television coverage of the brutal tactics used against protesters by the Birmingham police, even opponents of the Civil Rights Movement were (1 point) appalled by the police violence. angry with the peaceful protesters. supportive of the actions of the police. uninterested in the confrontation. 7. Essayist James Baldwin wrote about the (1 point) white viewpoint on civil rights. benefits of a segregated society. effectiveness of sit-ins. violent consequences of segregation. 8. The Black Panthers wanted African Americans to (1 point) end the urban riots. lead their own communities. practice nonviolent protest. join interracial groups. 9. During the 1960 presidential campaign, John F. Kennedy promised to (1 point) win the Cold War against the Soviet Union. cut back dramatically on military spending. get the American economy moving again. abolish the electoral college. 10. What was the intent of the Immigration Act of 1965, which was passed during the Johnson administration? (1 point) to increase the number of immigrants from northern and western Europe to eliminate quotas restricting immigration from certain countries to reduce the total annual number of immigrants to the United States to stem the flow of political refugees to the United States 11. Kennedy believed that he could encourage stability in Latin America by (1 point) promoting economic development. cooperating with Communist governments. supporting popular revolutions. ending social-reform programs. 12. The Equal Rights Amendment passed Congress in 1972 and then (1 point) was vetoed by the President. was approved by the Supreme Court. became law 10 years later. failed in the ratification process. 13. In the 1960s, Mexican Americans fought discrimination in (1 point) cultural and religious matters. labor unions. professional sports. jobs, education, and legal matters. 14. A major theme of the book Silent Spring, which helped start the Environmental Movement, was that (1 point) human beings are superior to the nature around them. human beings and nature are separate but equal. human beings and nature are separate and unequal. humans are part of nature, and all parts of nature interact. 15. Why did South Vietnamese military leaders overthrow Diem? (1 point) He had joined the Communists. He had lost American support. He had tried to flee Saigon. He had converted to Buddhism. Essay CRITICAL THINKING 16. Making Comparisons On the issue of segregation, compare the views of Martin Luther King, Jr. to those of Malcolm X. more

Resolved Question: Do people not understand the difference between legalizing and declaring unconstitutional?

Okay, as a gay man, I'm quite excited about the Iowa State Supreme Court's decision to strike down the ban against gay marriage in Iowa. However, to "legalize" something means that law is passed recognizing it. Iowa's legislature can still use other methods to block gay marriage. If it seeks to go the "separate but equal" route, they can approach the court to get prior clarification if Civil Unions would meet the court's judgement. Iowa voters can (and likely will) pursue a constitutional amendment (which would make such a ban constitutional). Why is it people are celebrating this as a victory when it's not? We still have a long way to go.Innocent: This is where I'm seeing the questions & answers that lead me to ask this. This is where the people I interact with on a daily basis are. The prohibition was of a religious nature. As such -- this is the best section for ME to have posted this. more

Resolved Question: Is it imperative that we stop the ERA from being ratified in Nevada?

I just received this from Nevada concerned citizens. The ERA is back. AJR3: The Equal Rights Amendment was introduced on March 9, 2009 by Nevada Assemblywoman Kathy McClain. Here is what Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg says will happen if this amendment is ratified: ► Women must not be exempted from military combat. ► Affirmative action must equalize men and women in the military. ►No-fault divorce must be adopted nationally. ►Government must provide comprehensive child care. ►The age of consent for sex must be lowered to age 12. ►Prostitution must be legalized as part of “privacy.” ►Bigamy laws would become unconstitutional as part of “privacy.” ►Prisons must be sex-integrated. ►Single-sex schools and colleges must be sex-integrated. ►Fraternities and sororities must be sex-integrated. ►Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts must be sex-integrated. ► Mother’s Day and Father’s Day must not be separate holidays. ►The words “husband” and “wife” must be eliminated and replaced with “spouse.” These statements are not the words of conservatives demonizing the ERA… they’re the documented opinion of the country’s most prominent legal advocate of the Equal Rights Amendment, liberal/feminist Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, in her book “Sex Bias in the U.S. Code”♦ The ERA would void the federal DOMA law which defines marriage as the “legal union between one man and one woman as husband and wife,” putting our marriage amendment in jeopardy. ♦ The ERA would abolish the wife’s and widow’s benefit in Social Security These two changes alone would be a cultural disaster in this country. Justice Ginsburg makes it clear that the ERA will eliminate certain social security benefits for women who choose to work in the home. Ginsburg’s contempt for the wife’s benefit in Social Security, which she calls “sexstereotyping,” is stated repeatedly in her book and she calls it a “prime recommendation” that it be eliminated. The feminists don’t want wives and mothers to receive Social Security benefits unless they work in paid jobs in the labor force just like men.I added nothing to the above. I copied and pasted all of it. I brought it here for opinions and answers. "food for thought" more

Resolved Question: United States History Help?

1. After the war, the African American civil rights movement (1 point) made few gains until the 1960s. accelerated. focused on suing the military. lost its main leaders. 2. The Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education ended (1 point) the "separate but equal" doctrine. Jackie Robinson's career in baseball. Eisenhower's support of civil rights. discrimination in the hiring of federal employees. 3. The Montgomery bus boycott introduced a new generation of African American (1 point) bus drivers. high school students. leaders. baseball players. 4. In 1957 Eisenhower used the Arkansas National Guard to (1 point) enforce school integration. uphold the "separate but equal" doctrine. protect factories from striking workers. support the governor of Arkansas. 5. Mexican American reform groups such as the Community Service Organization sought change through (1 point) migration to California. an approach known as "termination." the referendum process. peaceful protest. more

Resolved Question: I need some US History Help.?

I cannot find the answers to these questions in my book. Please help. The early 20th century saw a significant northward migration of African-Americans. During the 1920s, nearly 400,000 African-Americans settled in New York, Pennsylvania and Illinois. Many lived in large cities such as New York, Philadelphia and Chicago. Identify and explain TWO important effects of this migration. (2 points) A newspaper headline states, “Federal Reserve Decides to Reduce the Money Supply; Slowing of the Economy Likely Impact.” According to the headline, the Federal Reserve: a) wants banks to reduce lending b) thinks the unemployment rate is too high c) wants banks to give more customer loans d) hopes consumers will decide to spend more In 1954, in Brown V. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, the Supreme Court set a new precedent by striking down the: a) electoral college b) doctrine of "separate but equal" c) Civil Rights movement d) idea of "One man, One vote" 33. The New Deal following the Great Depression had what effect upon the role of government in the economy? a) decreased government influence b) increased government influence c) increased income taxes d) decreased income taxes 35. Why did many people in the late 1800s and early 1900s want the government to break up trusts? a) trusts created excessive competition b) trusts decreased dividends for their shareholders c) trusts advocated an increase in labor union membership d) trusts decreased competition and fixed prices 36. During the late 1930s, U.S. foreign policy was characterized by which of the following statements? a) a desire to be isolated from the problems in Europe b) military preparation to go to war to defeat the Nazis c) a desire to help Britain and France as they stood up to Hitler's demands d) military preparation to go to war to defeat the Japanese 41. There was a connection between industrial expansion and European imperialism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Did imperialism increase or decrease as a result of industrialization? (1 point) Explain why this change occurred. (1 point) 45. The League of Nations was created after World War I as a forum for resolving international conflicts. However, the League was unable to resolve tensions that led to World War II. One factor that contributed to the ineffectiveness of the League was the: a) breakup of colonial empires in Africa and Asia b) decision of the US not to join the League c) Opposition of League members to the Treaty of Versailles more

Resolved Question: Why do supporters of Civil Unions (but not marriage) think "separate but equal" is constitutional?

"Separate but equal" was ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme court in Brown v. Board of Education (1964). To those of you who respond, "It doesn't apply to everything; men and women have separate but equal restrooms": My rebuttle to you is: Separate restrooms ensure "The Right to Privacy." The Supreme Court has found that, although the right to privacy is not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution, it can be found in what is called the "penumbra" of other constitutional protections. This means that these rights by necessity create other rights. This was first set forth in Griswold v Connecticut (1965). more

Voting Question: Those who support civil unions but not marriage: Do you think "Separate but Equal" is constitutional?

Cause it was declared unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court in "Brown v. Board of Education" (1964).You may argue, "They have the same rights as straight people: The right to marry someone of the opposite sex." No, they don't have the same rights: You're denying them the right to marry the person of their choice and the desired individaul of their sexual orientation.Soy: men and women have separate restrooms for the purpose of privacy, and many argue there is an implied righ to privacy in the constitution.Mithanial Marr: Definitions of English words change all the time. Are you for banning modern dictionaries? It's not reality that must reflect words.... It's words that must reflect reality. and btw, most states do not recognize civil unions. more

Resolved Question: My same-sex marriage paper for American Politics (A very long read)?

Thought some people might like to read it. Respond however you want, criticism, support, arguements, whatever haha. This is the perspective of one 18 year old. Should Gay Marriage be legal? Marriage is not a federally defined word. No state constitution originally defined marriage either. It was not until 1998 that 28 states made amendments to define the term “marriage” to ban same-sex marriage. “Civil unions” are currently allowed between and a man and a man or a woman and a woman in five states: Vermont, New Jersey, Connecticut, California, and Oregon. There is a list of 1,400 rights that the beneficiaries of marriage enjoy that are denied to domestic partners including joint adoption rights, status of “next-to-kin” for their partners medical decisions, and many financial relieves. “Only marriage provides a legal safety net protecting couples emotional bonds and economic security” (lesbianlife.about.com). These rights are minor relative to those being fought for in the fifties; however, the fight for the legality of same-sex marriage is a civil rights case to many. People sometimes say, “Well they’re the same thing under different titles.” The practice of Separate but Equal, decided by the Supreme Court in Brown v. The Board of Education, is illegal and unconstitutional. Desegregation of schools followed the case, because the justices found Separate but Equal to be “inherently unequal” and thus unconstitutional. Marriage, to me, seems to be such a natural right that it is both odd and awkward to argue for it. So, why should it not be allowed? I will argue against all of the reasonable arguments (Warren Chisum argues “Animals don’t do that”… I will not address that argument) to why marriage laws should remain the same. Anti-gay marriage activists argue that marriage receives legal support in order to create a healthy emotional and financial environment in which to raise a child. This is the main argument against same-sex marriage. However, if marriage was allowed by the government just to create life, the states should not allow infertile couples or couples who have no desire to have children to marry. By allowing these people to marry, they are giving two people who will never raise a child all the benefits sought after by gay-marriage activists. Every state allows single gays and lesbians to adopt children, only eleven states allow same-sex couples to adopt children. People are very uncomfortable with the idea of gays raising a child. “It is emotionally harmful to the child,” they say. Most people believe that children grow healthily in a loving and supportive environment. Loving parents, not the sexual orientation of the parents, create loving children. Gay parents will influence their child into being gay. Sexual orientation is inborn and is not influenced by parents (obviously, heterosexual parents are constantly creating gay children). The sexual orientation of a parent will not effect the well being of a child. If the state cares more about the well being of children than suppressing gay rights, I suggest they look into the recent birth of octuplets through in vitro fertilization. Nadya Suleman gay birth to eight more children this February in additional to her other six. I would argue that these children face a much graver risk of emotional abuse then those adopted by gay couples. I am not arguing that the government should abolish her right to use in vitro fertilization however she desires, but rather I am comparing the two cases. I think most people would agree that her case is much more potentially damaging then two loving but homosexual parents. The second argument is that gay marriage is both sinful and immoral. Says who? Unfortunately, many of the world’s religions (Christianity, Judaism, and Islam) which are also prominent in the United States believe that homoerotic sex is sinful. The United States Constitution, written by all Protestants except one Catholic, insures the separation of church and state. Even they recognized the importance of this. Christians define marriage as between a man and a woman. The federal government has yet to define marriage this way. I imagine that most of the anti-gay marriage is powered by religion yet hidden behind other arguments. Christianity does not usually play a role in our legal system; abortion is legal, the states teach children about contraception, and both premarital sex and sodomy are legal. However, gay marriage is not legal probably due to Christianity. People fear that same-sex marriage will spoil the sanctity of marriage. Firstly, marriage is holy in a religious sense. Secondly, why does more loving people creating life-long bonds ruin this sanctity? There is a stereotype of homosexuals as promiscuous. People look at the mainstream New York City gay scene, feel uncomfortable, and label gays as promiscuous. This is one of many double standards put on gays. For the gay scene in New York there is an e more

Voting Question: What was the Supreme Court decision in 1954 that stated "separate but Equal" schools are unconstitutional?

My history report more

Resolved Question: english help me now n n?

It wasn’t until 1967 that interracial marriage was allowed in Virginia . Fourteen of the Southern states approved “one-drop rule, ” which states that people who have a black ancestor must be classified as slaves. In the late 1800s, shoemaker Homer Plessy boarded a train restricted to white passengers. Plessy was seven-eight white and one-eight black, but under the law in Louisiana, any person with any African American ancestors would be considered to be black . Plessy was arrested for violating the Louisiana Separate Car Act, in 1896 the Supreme Court ruled against him, it was ok to have separate but equal facilities . Desiree has an unknown background, because of her unknown background Armand assumes that she is part black, she was marriage with wealthy white, and dismissed with her black son. This story has a lot of symbols of racism one of them are “Young Anbigny’s rule was a strict one,too, and under it his negoes had forgotten how to be gay” , can you help me revise the paragarh more

Resolved Question: another AP question ...?

can u help me find summaries of these four documents please, it would mean the world Pg 94 Andrew Carnegie’s Gospel of Wealth (1889) Pg 97 Jacob Riis Goes Summing (1890) Pg 114 William Jennings Bryan’s Cross of Gold (1896) Pg 117 The Supreme Court Declares That Separate Is Equal (1896) please help me....please =( more

Voting Question: Help in S.s ....First and best answer gets the 10 p0ointsss?

In Plessy v. Ferguson, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that separation of the races did not violate the 14th Amendment. In doing so, the Court established the doctrine of “separate but equal.” Explain how this doctrine changed the Constitution. more

Resolved Question: Why is it that Barack Hussein Obama is black not whithe?

There is no black or whithe! And to day he is more black than white is a gross lie! And is scintifIcly and Geneticly false! I being amix person if there is such a thing feal that this type of thinking is a big problem in the USA. it is not found in alot of other places in the world. And it's slave master thinking in the frist place, If you set a law saying that a mixed person is not white he cant vote in favor of the slaves. The one drop rule still blages the US. to day One drop rule Warren Harding and Barack Obama. [show] Harding may have had enough African American ancestry (one great grandparent) for him to be black under the one drop rule.[85] Conversely Barack Obama has one African parent and one white American parent. Having a white parent is never enough to be considered white, there is no reverse one drop rule. Obama is normally identified as black and identifies himself as African American.[86]Further information: One drop rule and Racial segregation The one drop rule — that a person with any amount of known of African ancestry (however small or invisible) is not white — is is a classification that has been used in the United States.[87] It is a colloquial term for a set of laws passed by 18 states of the USA between 1910 and 1931, many of these laws were passed as a consequence of Plessy v. Ferguson, a Supreme Court decision that upheld the concept of racial segregation by accepting a separate but equal argument. The set of laws was finally declared unconstitutional in 1967, when the Supreme Court ruled on anti-miscegenation laws while hearing Loving v. Virginia, which also found that Virginia's Racial Integrity Act of 1924 was unconstitutional. The one drop rule attempted to create a bifurcated system of either black or white regardless of a person's physical appearance, but sometimes failed as people with African ancestry sometimes passed as "white" as noted above. This contrasts with the more flexible social structures present in Latin America, where there were no clear-cut divisions between various ethnicities.[88]. As a result of centuries of having children with White people, the majority of African Americans have white admixture, and many white people also have African ancestry. Robert P. Stuckert, member of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at The Ohio State University said that the majority of the descendants of African slaves are white.[89] Writer and editor Debra Dickerson questions the legitimacy of the one drop rule, stating that "easily one-third of blacks have white DNA".[90] She argues that in ignoring their white ancestry, African Americans are denying their fully articulated multi-racial identities. The peculiarity of the one drop rule may be illustrated by the case of singer Mariah Carey,[91] who was publicly called "another white girl trying to sing black", but in an interview with Larry King, responded that—despite her physical appearance and the fact that she was raised primarily by her white mother—due to the one drop rule she did not "feel white."[92][93][94] more

Resolved Question: i need social studies help?

Which provided the legal basis for racial segregation in the late 19th century United States? A.Supreme Court decisions that excluded blacks from voting B.adoption of laws by the United States Congress C.passage of "Jim Crow" laws by state legislatures D.laws in northern states that prevented blacks from working in factories The views of William E.B. DuBois clashed with those of Booker T. Washington because DuBois insisted that African Americans should A.seek immediate equality of all types and resist any form of second-class citizenship B.pursue a policy of gradual integration C.accept racial segregation laws because they were constitutional D.learn a trade before pursuing political equality Speaker A:The [African American] demands equality -- political equality, industrial equality, and social equality; and he is never going to be satisfied with anything less. Speaker B:Equal but separate accommodations for the white and colored races is for the preservation of the public peace and good order. Speaker C:Vocational training will provide the means for African Americans to gain the civil liberties they deserve. Speaker D:The best answer for the equality of the [African American] lies in a return to his homeland in Africa. Base your answer on the statements and on your knowledge of social studies. Which speaker would most likely support the Jim Crow laws that emerged in the 1890s? A. speaker A B. speaker B C. speaker C D. speaker D more

Resolved Question: history help!? please, i cant get it!?

13. The goal of the Sherman Antitrust Act was to (1 point) encourage industries to form cartels. promote fair industrial competition. place higher taxes on business profits. encourage the growth of business monopolies. 14. The expansion of American industry was sparked mainly by (1 point) public welfare programs. technological advances and financial investments. a decline in productivity in Europe. government involvement in the economy. 15. Which one of the following did the Populists support? (1 point) the Turner thesis a progressive income tax staying on the gold standard private ownership of communications and transportation systems 16. What reason was given by settlers as to why they had a greater right to western lands than the Native Americans? (1 point) The government already owned all the land of the West. The Native Americans did not want the land. Settlers produced more food and wealth than Native Americans. Native Americans had already agreed to give away their lands. 17. Which of the following was a major result of both immigration and the increased productivity of factory jobs in the late 1800s? (1 point) the rapid expansion of urban areas mechanization of agriculture high wages for factory workers overpopulation of the South 18. Why did many immigrants support city political machines? (1 point) Political machines were free of corruption. Political machines provided them with jobs. Political machines put powerful "bosses" out of business. Political machines fought against crime in the slums. 19. In the case of Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court (1 point) declared segregation unconstitutional. established the "separate-but-equal" doctrine, upholding segregation. ordered public school districts to upgrade schools for African Americans. ordered universities to enroll more women and African Americans. 20. During the late 1800s, women from which of these groups were most likely to work outside the home? (1 point) older married women women in the South uneducated women young single women 21. Which was a result of the Spanish-American War? (1 point) Cuba became a Spanish protectorate. Puerto Rico and Guam were made unincorporated U.S. territories. Spain admitted it had blown up the Maine. The Philippines won independence from foreign rule. 22. The United States followed a policy of expansionism in the late 1800s because (1 point) European nations were eager to sell rights to their colonies. many Americans were demanding high-quality foreign goods. U.S. factories needed foreign laborers. the nation sought more markets for its goods. 23. The building of the Panama Canal was important because it (1 point) helped stabilize the economies of Latin American countries. improved relations between Colombia and the United States. facilitated movement between Atlantic and Pacific ports. promoted European investment in the United States. 24. President Roosevelt's progressive record included all of the following except (1 point) conservation of forest land. break-up of several trusts deemed harmful to the public. regulation of food and drugs. establishment of the Federal Reserve System. 25. Which belief was held by most Progressives? (1 point) The government should be more accountable to its citizens. Housing and health care should remain private. The government should protect agricultural interests. The government should never intervene in unfair business practices. 26. Which was a major contributor to Woodrow Wilson's winning the presidency in 1912? (1 point) a split between northern and southern Democrats Taft's decision not to run for a second term Roosevelt's splitting the Republican vote the candidacy of Eugene V. Debs 27. Which event sparked World War I? (1 point) the sinking of the Lusitania the German-French dispute over Alsace-Lorraine Russia's quest for a warm-water port the assassination of the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne 28. Which of the following was a major factor in the United States' decision to enter World War I? (1 point) Britain's naval blockade of Germany Germany's unrestircted submarine warfare Vladimir Lenin's rise to power in Russia France's fall to the Central Powers 29. The government increased control of the economy during World War I by (1 point) filing a record number of antitrust suits. enacting price controls and rationing. overseeing war-related production. forbidding any unions to strike. 30. Many senators opposed American entry into the League of Nations because (1 point) they feared it would weaken the country's independence. they disapproved of its other member countries. they wanted stronger promises of support from other countries. they had already approved the Versailles Treaty. 31. How did the Federalists and Jeffersonian Republicans differ in their opinion of how the Constitution should be interpreted? (5 points) 32. more

Resolved Question: US History Questions?

41. Roger Williams' was banished from the Massachusetts Bay colony because: A. he believed that salvation depended upon good works. B. he argued that the church should be completely separated from the state to protect the purity of faith. C. he tried to persuade other settlers that they should take land from the Indians. D. he believed that Puritanism was a false religion. E. he claimed that church and state in the colony should be tied closely together. 42. In McCulloch v. Maryland, the Supreme Court: A. decided that states could not impose a tax on the federal government. B. agreed that a state had full power of economic affairs within its own borders. C. decided that Maryland should be able to tax the Bank of the United States. D. upheld the right of immigrants to vote. E. upheld the right of state banks to issue currency. 43. When workers began a strike against Pullman in 1894, President Cleveland: A. sent in federal troops on the side of the workers. B. decided not to become involved because of political dangers. C. sent in federal troops on the side of management. D. sent a member of his cabinet to serve as a mediator between labor and management. E. threatened to make it a major campaign issue in the next election. 44. At the Constitutional Convention, conflicts between large and small states were resolved by: A. giving small states more control over the levying of taxes. B. agreeing to the addition of 10 amendments that protected the rights and civil liberties of individuals. C. making representation in the Senate equal for each state and representation in the House of Representatives proportionate to population. D. making representation in the House of Representatives equal for each state and representation in the Senate proportionate to population. E. agreeing to compensate small states financially for their lost decision-making power in the new legislature. 45. Democrats and residents of border states accused Lincoln of "tyranny" during the Civil War primarily because he: A. freed slaves in border states. B. instituted a national currency. C. suspended the writ of habeas corpus. D. pushed through a transcontinental railroad bill. E. did all of the above. 46. ". . . whenever there shall be a declared war between the United States and any foreign nation or government, or any invasion or predatory incursion shall be perpetrated, attempted, or threatened against the territory of the United States, by any foreign nation or government, and the President of the United States shall make public proclamation of the event, all natives, citizens, denizens, or subjects of the hostile nation or government, being males of the age of fourteen years and upwards, who shall be within the United States, and not actually naturalized, shall be liable to be apprehended, restrained, secured and removed. . . ." This passage is from: A. Jay’s Treaty. B. Adams’ Judiciary Act. C. the 10th Amendment to the Constitution. D. the Alien and Sedition Acts. E. the Treaty of Ghent. 47. Jackson's policy of uprooting Eastern tribes and transporting them to Oklahoma was a response to: A. a growing number of fatal attacks by Indians on farm families in Tennessee. B. pressure from White squatters and speculators to increase land available for settlement. C. requests from major political contributors to his campaign. D. a genuine humanitarian concern for the safety of Indians no longer able to protect themselves from White settlers. E. the discovery that Indians could not work in cotton agriculture as efficiently as African Americans. 48. One way colonial assemblies gained power in the eighteenth century was: A. by assuming the same privileges enjoyed by the House of Commons in Great Britain. B. by disobeying laws imposed by the British government. C. by associating themselves with leaders of the Great Awakening. D. by introducing democratic ideals. E. by selecting outstanding leaders. 49. Which of the following was not among the ideas included in the "Separate Spheres" school of thought regarding the roles of men and women? A. Women should participate in government whenever possible. B. An idealized image of what a woman should be C. Men should stay in school longer than women. D. Women are responsible for teaching their children the values of their society. E. Men should dominate public affairs. 50. What was the greatest challenge faced by James Madison during his presidency? A. An American Indian uprising on the northwest frontier B. War with Mexico C. War with Great Britain D. Stabilizing the state banking systems E. A trade war with Europe more

Resolved Question: Shouldn't we Close Down all of the Women's Prisons?

In today's economy, it's difficult to justify the expense of prison segregation. Millions of dollars could be saved by moving all female prisoners into existing Men's Prisons, and then shutting down the women's prisons. Women who fear Sexual Abuse or mistreatment in the new Unisex Prison System could simply avoid prison by NOT COMMITTING CRIMES. It's been 55 years since The Supreme Court overturned Plessy vs. Ferguson, which had allowed for "separate but equal" facilities to keep races from integrating. Isn't it high time to end the unfair favoritism shown to women by the Criminal Justice System?Ducky: Do I sound like I'm joking? Smelly: Simply put up a sign: No babies allowed.Smokey: Except for pregnancy--which I addressed above--we don't consider any of those issues when we put a MAN in prison. Therefore, it is clearly discriminatory to consider them when deciding where to house a WOMAN prisoner.Unpretty: Again, NO BABIES ALLOWED!!! "They are treated just like male inmates, save for a very few small differences (such as nurseries)" .....er, that's not a SMALL difference, that's a HUGE difference! If women prisoners can get nurseries, then men prisoners should get, I dunno, Carribian Cruises!!!! So ONE MORE TIME: NO BABIES! Sorry, but you lose some rights when you get convicted of a crime. Sorry! Geesh!!!!!!! more

Resolved Question: 1. The generation of babies born between 1946 and 1964 became known as "baby boomers"?

1. The generation of babies born between 1946 and 1964 became known as "baby boomers" because of the dramatic increase in the number of births. (1 point) True False 2. The House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) investigated what type of organizations? (1 point) African American international student fascist and communist 3. Who was found guilty of and executed for giving atomic secrets to the Soviets in 1950? (1 point) Alger Hiss Julius and Ethel Rosenberg Joseph McCarthy John F. Kennedy 4. What was the ruling of the Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court case of 1896? (1 point) that segregation of blacks and whites was unconstitutional that the segregation of men and women was constitutional that separate facilities for immigrants and American citizens was unconstitutional that separate facilities for blacks and whites were permitted if they were equal 5. Brown v. Board of Education eventually resulted in (1 point) the segregation of public schools. the integration of private universities. the segregation of public universities. the intergation of public schools. 6. This individual refused to give up a seat on a city bus in Montgomery, Alabama, challenging segregation. (1 point) Rosa Parks Martin Luther King, Jr. Malcolm X Linda Brown True/False 7. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 guaranteed equal access to employment and public places. (1 point) True False 8. What group believed there would have to be an armed revolution in order to gain full rights for African Americans? (1 point) the Nation of Islam the Freedom Riders the Little Rock Nine the Black Panthers 9. Lyndon Johnson's plan for domestic improvement was known as (1 point) the Great Society. the New Frontier. the New Deal. the Civil Rights Movement. True/False 10. The Supreme Court decision of Roe v. Wade prohibits women from having an abortion. (1 point) True False more

Resolved Question: U.S. History Homework Help... for my sister... Please!!!!?

1. Slavery in Africa differed from slavery as it developed in the Americas in that A) women and children were not enslaved. B) only complete families were enslaved. C) enslavement lasted only seven years. D) slaves could move up in society and out of slavery 2. Which of the following best describes the Northwest Passage? A) John Cabot's sailing across the Atlantic Ocean from England B) Ferdinand Magellan's circumnavigating the world C) water route across North America D) the Puritans' route from England to Massachusetts 3. England prized its North American colonies because A) they provided England with natural resources of gold and silver. B) they provided soldiers for the British Army to fight in European wars. C) they supplied England with food and raw materials and bought English goods. D) they manufactured goods for England. 4. What was a major advantage of the American colonists in the Revolutionary War? A) fighting on their own territory B) poorly supplied British forces C) an effective fighting force D) Native American allies 5. Some anti-Federalists agreed to support the Constitution after the Federalists added the A) separation of powers. B) Bill of Rights. C) Preamble. D) system of checks and balances 6. Which was a provision of the Missouri Compromise of 1820? A) Missouri and Maine were denied statehood. B) Free states could never outnumber slave states. C) Slavery could not spread to any western lands. D) All states north of 36º 30' N latitude would be free states. 7. Steam power and canal building were important because they A) allowed farmers to ship their goods to markets around the country. B) caused a decline in the demand for slave labor. C) discouraged the settlement of western regions. D) increased the cost of transportation and communication. 8. The Monroe Doctrine stated that A) European countries must give up their colonies in the Western Hemisphere. B) the United States was free to take sides in European wars. C) Europe must control all nations in the Western Hemisphere. D) further European colonization in the Western Hemsiphere was prohibited. 9. All abolitionists agreed about A) the importance of women's participation. B) the need to work within the political system. C) what tactics to use in their struggle. D) the need to end slavery. 10. The Civil War began with the A) secession of South Carolina. B) illegal formation of the Confederate States of America. C) attack on Lawrence, Kansas, a center of free-soiler activity. D) Confederate attack on Fort Sumter. 11. Which of the following was a strategy of the Confederate government? A) blockading the North's Atlantic coast B) attacking the North by way of the Mississippi River C) seeking support from Britain and France D) limiting the upper draft age to 35 12. In their Reconstruction policies, both President Lincoln and President Johnson insisted upon A) sworn statements of allegiance from a majority of citizens. B) immediate elections in all Southern states. C) acceptance of federal policy on slavery. D) a fair redistribution of land. 13. The goal of the Sherman Antitrust Act was to A) encourage industries to form cartels. B) promote fair industrial competition. C) place higher taxes on business profits. D) encourage the growth of business monopolies. 14. The expansion of American industry was sparked mainly by A) public welfare programs. B) technological advances and financial investments. C) a decline in productivity in Europe. D) government involvement in the economy. 15. Which one of the following did the Populists support? A) the Turner thesis B) a progressive income tax C) staying on the gold standard D) private ownership of communications and transportation systems 16. What reason was given by settlers as to why they had a greater right to western lands than the Native Americans? A) The government already owned all the land of the West. B) The Native Americans did not want the land. C) Settlers produced more food and wealth than Native Americans. D) Native Americans had already agreed to give away their lands. 17. Which of the following was a major result of both immigration and the increased productivity of factory jobs in the late 1800s? A) the rapid expansion of urban areas B) mechanization of agriculture C) high wages for factory workers D) overpopulation of the South 18. Why did many immigrants support city political machines? A) Political machines were free of corruption. B) Political machines provided them with jobs. C) Political machines put powerful "bosses" out of business. D) Political machines fought against crime in the slums. 19. In the case of Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court A) declared segregation unconstitutional. B) established the "separate-but-equal" doctrine, upholding segregation. C) ordered public school more

Resolved Question: History Multiple Choice?

A:) 1. Anti-Vietnam War protests broke out on college campuses from New York to California from the late 1960s through the early 1970s. Since college students were the same age of the young men being drafted into the war and many had friends that had died while serving, many students felt duty-bound to protest the war. The worst of the protests occurred May 1-4, 1970 at A. Ohio State University B. Kent State University C. Ohio University D. Miami University 2. As a result of the Montgomery bus boycott, A. Martin Luther King, Jr. attracted national attention B. The public transportation system in Montgomery was desegregated C. It showed the power of peaceful resistance D. All of the above 3. In Brown v. Board of Education (1954), the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional and that schools must integrate with all deliberate speed. What was the effect of the Court’s ruling? A. By the late 1960s, segregation was no longer the official policy in most schools. B. The ruling led to increased segregation. C. Since schools were already integrated, the Court’s ruling had little effect. D. Racial segregation in schools ended immediately. 4. The Brown v. Board of Education decision in 1954 did which of the following? A. Struck down the principal of “separate but equal” in schools. B. Provided for segregated schools based on race. C. Supported the Plessy v. Ferguson decision of 1896. D. Allowed for male and female students to attend the same schools. 5. In 1977, advocates for people with disabilities staged a series of protest demonstrations across the country. These demonstrations urged enforcement of anti-discrimination legislation. The demonstrations continued a pattern of protests for equal treatment under the law influenced by A. anti-war protests during the Vietnam War. B. Civil rights marches of the 1950s and 1960s. C. Farm labor strikes of the 1960s. D. Ku Klux Klan rallies of the 1920s. 6. Malcolm X’s beliefs in the early 1960s differed from Dr. Martin Luther King’s in that Malcolm X felt A. Blacks should be willing to fight for equal rights. B. Whites and blacks would eventually be able to exist together. C. Only through nonviolent resistance could blacks gain their rights. D. All of the above 7. By 1968, Americans public opinion about the Vietnam War was divided into two main groups: hawks and doves. A hawk was someone who A. supported the war. B. was in the Army. C. opposed the war. D. remained neutral about the war. 8. During the 1960s, the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) organized Freedom Rides throughout the South to end segregation on interstate bus routes. James Farmer, national director of CORE at that time, described in an interview one of the strategies used by the Freedom Riders: "We felt that one of the weaknesses of the student sit-in movement in the South was that as soon as arrested, students were bailed out. A better tactic would have been to remain in jail. Fill up the jails, as Gandhi did in India, fill them to bursting if we had to. In other words, stay in without bail." James Farmer’s statement would be a credible source of information about a strategy used during the civil rights movement because A. it is free of bias. B. it was published in a book. C. he was a civil rights leader. D. he uses statistics to support his opinions. 9. One of the first important waves in rock music in the 1960s was something called the "British Invasion," which essentially started in 1964. A band primarily associated with this wave was A. The Supremes B. The Beatles C. The Doors D. The Grateful Dead 10. The counterculture movement of the 1960s was A. an effort to promote aspects of refined culture (such as classical music). B. the result of a younger generation breaking away from traditional values. C. entirely unsuccessful as most “hippies” were incarcerated for drug use. D. an organization in which the main goal was to protest the Vietnam War B:) 1. What has been one of the greatest obstacles to achieving racial integration of public schools in the United States? A. Federal courts have avoided dealing with public education. B. Many cities have local laws requiring children of different races to attend different schools. C. Separate but equal public education is still legal in many states. D. Segregated housing patterns are still common in many communities. 2. By the end of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1970s, African Americans have generally A. Found it difficult to move up from the lower class. B. Prospered as part of the upper class in the U.S. C. Done very well as part of the middle class. D. Blended into mainstream America. 3. The organization that instituted education, health, more

Resolved Question: Though morally acceptable, are "separate but equal" restrooms for men & women technically illegal?

1964 Supreme Court precedent: "Separate but equal" is unconstitutional. Are they breaking the law by having separate restrooms? Are police just saying "yeah, I know it's technically illegal but in the spirit of ethics, let's keep the restrooms separate." ? Does the constitution also provide the right to "privacy?" more

Voting Question: I have a question for those of you who support same sex civil unions but not marriage?

Do you disagree with the 1964 Supreme court ruling that precedented the concept of "separate but equal" unconstitutional?The separation of public bathrooms, dressing rooms, etc., is for privacy, not because people think one is better than the other, or something like that.Liff: Dogs are property. They do not have a legal standing, nor can they consicously & willingly agree to marry. Children are not of the age of consent. Marriage is between two unrealted consenting adults.Marriage is between two consenting adults who are not related to each other.Offsuspend: There'a also the right to "privacy." more

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