1) How did the U.S government increase Mexican immigration?
A. congress passed laws saying that all Latino's fleeing dictators are welcome
B. the government passed a law that requires collective bargaining
C. the bracero program granted temporary guest worker status to more than 4 million Mexicans

2) What did Native Americans do to force people to pay attention to their needs?
A. they formed groups such as AIM to address civil right issues
B. they took control of all federal prisons on Native American land
C. They led a boycott of california grapes across the country

3) How did life change for people with disabilities in the 1960's and 1970's?
A. the government created an athletic camp callrf the Special Olympics
B. congress passed several laws granting them equal access to education
C. they were encouraged to hide their disabilities from the world

Respuesta :

Definitely, U.S government increase Mexican immigration by creating working program that offers different job places for lots of people , so the answer on the first question is C. the bracero program granted temporary guest worker status to more than 4 million Mexicans because.
The second one is A. they formed groups such as AIM to address civil right issues, establishing strong positions till they get justice.

Answer:

1)  The answer is C.  The bracero program granted temporary guest workers status to more than 4 million Mexicans

2) The answer is A. Native Americans formed groups such as AIM to address civil right issues.

3)   The answer is B. Congress passed several laws granting them equal access to education

Explanation:

Question 1)

The bracero program was a series of laws and diplomatic agreements where the laborers from Mexico were promised decent living conditions in labor camps, such as adequate shelter, food and sanitation, as well as a minimum wage and was intended to fill the labor shortage in agriculture.  

Question 2)

The American Indian Movement (AIM) began in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1968 and was formed by te Indian Community to protect the Native Americans civil rights. The main goal of the organization is the preservation of their culture and traditions, and enforcement of all treaties with the United States.  

AIM's leaders spoke out against unemployment, indecent housing, racist treatment, and the reclamation of tribal land.  

In spite of the straightforwardness of AIM's leaders, their fervor drew the attention of the FBI and the CIA, who then were said to have set out to crush the movement. Their said ruthless suppression of AIM during the early 1970s seemed to have sowed the seeds of the confrontation that followed in February, 1973, when AIM leader Russell Means and his followers took over the small Indian community of Wounded Knee, South Dakota, in protest of an allegedly corrupt government. FBI agents were dispatched to remove the AIM occupiers and two people were killed, twelve wounded, and twelve hundred controversially arrested.

Question 3)

In 1960 disability rights activists mobilized and demanded national initiatives fostering disabled children to be taken out of institutions and asylums, and placed into schools where they could have the opportunity to engage in society just like children who were not disabled. In the 1970s for the first time in history, civil rights of people with disabilities were protected by law. The Rehabilitation Act of 1973  provided equal opportunity for employment within the federal government prohibiting discrimination on the basis of  physical or mental disability. It also established the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, observing equal access to public services  to people with disabilities, and the allocation of money for vocational training.

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