What was The Great Negro Exodus

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Answer 1
Answer:

Answer:

The Great Negro Exodus, also known as the Exodusters movement, refers to a significant migration of African Americans from the Southern states to the Midwest in the late 19th century. This movement took place primarily between 1879 and 1881.

Explanation:

yes.


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During his election campaign in 1988, George H.W. Bush promised not toA. raise taxes.
B. engage in foreign conflicts.
C. cut funding for welfare programs.
D. increase the minimum retirement age.

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During his election campaign in 1988, George H.W. Bush promised not to "raise taxes", since this was, as it is now, a main aspect of the Republican domestic platform. 

_____ was a code of behavior romanticized by medieval poets.

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"Chivalric Code" was a code of behavior romanticized by medieval poets, since this was the going "code" of honor and conduct for knights of the era. 

The european union is attempting to develop a national identity by creating cultural symbols such as:A national holiday
An anthem
One common dialect
All of the above

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The european union chose an anthem, the 9th symphony of beethoven. It didn't really work, because most europeans don't even know there is a european anthem.

By 1932, who were most in the United States blaming for the woes of the Great Depression? A. Franklin Delano Roosevelt B. Europe C. Herbert Hoover D. the Reconstruction Finance Corporation

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Correct answer:  C. Herbert Hoover

Herbert Hoover served as President of the United States from 1929 to 1933.  He was in office when the Great Depression began, and was blamed for the fact that the country struggled as it did.  The problems that led to the Depression had been building up for years before Hoover took office, but as the leader of the country when the troubles hit, he was the one who took the bulk of the criticism.  And Hoover really had no solutions to the problems.  In the 1932 presidential election, he was defeated by Franklin D. Roosevelt.  Roosevelt implemented "New Deal" policies to combat the Depression.

By 1932, who were most in the United States blaming for the woes of the Great Depression?c.Herber Hoover

Why do you think people feel so strongly about slavery? Answer in a full paragraph?

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American slavery has always been a highly debated topic throughout the years. Often, people associate slavery with words such as brutal, cruel, inhumane, and horrible. Slaves were forced to forget about freedom and forget about the liberties of life that we American’s now take for granted. In the readings “Slaves Appeal”, “Walker’s Appeal”, “Prospectus for the Liberator”, and the movie “Roots” there were many circumstances where slavery was described and realistically documented. 

When people have been enslaved for many generations, and there are many people in the world who've had that experience, and are still having that experience, it's very traumatic.  It does a lot of psychological damage that can take many generations to reverse, and if that process is botched it can just linger on indefinitely.  Naturally, people have very strong feelings about something that influences their lives so intimately and negatively.

For example, a form of slavery, feudalism, was rampant throughout Europe.  People who'd been entrapped in it for centuries fled to America.  There they found a civilization where the former 'nobles' (slave masters) in the Old World considered them equal human beings!  And all they had to do to achieve that equality was point their fingers at Black Americans and call them the inferiors (slaves).

Unfortunately, this was not a legitimate form of emancipation and it did not heal any of their problems.  It's all been festering now for two, three hundred years and they haven't made any progress at all on what ails them.  The only hope they've found has been the progress Black people have made in emancipating themselves in a legitimate way.  Many whites have found some degree of recovery.  You'll find them identifying themselves as 'anti-racist. ' That's generally coincidental with people into 'personal growth.'  

Their less fortunate, disadvantaged white brethren who still ascribe to the delusional form of so-called equality and freedom are rarely ever the achievers of any kind of personal growth.  So, you see, the post traumatic stress disorders from their unfortunate experience in Europe have remained intact to this very day, and impact their lives strongly, hence their strong feelings about slavery, that, if they're still in a state of denial about these oppression issues, have become quite twisted.

Most slaves that were sent to the Caribbean ended up working _________.

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Most slaves that were sent to the Caribbean ended up working sugar plantations, since sugar was in incredibly high demand in Europe, making it very expensive and profitable.