Answer:
The detail that best supports the answer to part A is:
“The Internet has radically changed how news sources communicate with their audience, and it has made it harder to define ‘news media’ exactly.” ( Paragraph 1)
Explanation:
The passage talks about different sources of 'news media'. It can be newspapers or radio or various internet sources which either read or write about the recent events happening across the globe. The passage also says that news media tries to unbiased as much as possible but it is very difficult to decide whether a given information is unbiased or not.
The detail from text which supports this is Option A. It says how internet being so wide these days that it becomes difficult to make out which news from 'news media' is correct and unbiased.
Answer:
The principle of public participation holds that those who are affected by a decision have a right to be involved in the decision-making process.
Explanation:
Answer:
to draw attention to the dangers of child labor, to show how young factory workers could be, to get Congress to ban child labor.
Explanation:
Those are the correct answers.
Answer:
Westward expansion of White settlers caused Native Americans to lose not only land by being confined to reservations but also their traditional resources, including the buffalo, hunting grounds, and sacred landmarks.
Explanation:
Trail of Tears
The Cherokee lived in the Southeast and were largely accepting of the colonial system. They had created a legal system as an independent nation and their government consistent with Cherokee and European traditions. They had their own newspaper and were literate. White settlers in Georgia however were pressing for land in order to grow cotton. In 1830 with the Indian Removal Act the federal government forced the Cherokee to leave and walk thousands of miles to “Indian territory” across the Mississippi River. This became known as the Trail of Tears. The Cherokee Nation initially sued for the return of their land and The Supreme Court sided with them but President Jackson overturned the Supreme Court ruling. More than 15,000 Cherokees were subsequently rounded up and forced to march.
Indian Campaigns in New Mexico
There was a similar scenario in New Mexico although it was later, during the Civil War. Kit Carson was a famous frontiersman who waged a brutal campaign against the Navajo in 1863. When the Navajo resisted confinement on reservations, Carson terrorized them by destroying villages and killing their livestock. Carson captured approximately 8,000 Navajo and marched them across New Mexico to the Bosque Redondo Reservation, over 300 miles from their former villages, where they remained for the duration of the war. There had been raids and tensions since the 1840s regarding land in this area and treaties were violated.