Respuesta :
1: Herbert Hoover thought that if something in society broke or went wrong that it would fix its self. Franklin D Roosevelt thought that they needed to be taking action when something in our government or society breaks.
2: Hoover's belief limited the govt. intervention and promoted him to be very careful about what he was doing.
3: By sending the National Guard out to remove them from the property and sent them home. The Bonus Army were a group of WWI veterans who were owed a bonus from fighting the war.
4: Most of them couldn't afford to pay the tax.
5: When do you decide that racism is not just a collection of non-isolated isolated incidents? When instead does it become a whole system set up for the benefit of a particular segment of society? In the South, it’s extraordinarily easy to blame people and their ignorance for the way things used to be. However, when you see those “feelings” and “thoughts” carried over into the legal system of America; that is when it becomes something much bigger than ignorance. That is when it becomes discrimination and racism that has a stamp of approval from the people that are supposed to be protecting the minority.
6: They made it so that the great depression started because they cut down all the grass. Then, the dirt would blow everywhere, and that would make the place really dry. They were having no rain and the crops didn't grow. Sooner they had too much dust and it created a deadly dust storm.
7: Farmers during the great depression faced many struggles due to the fall of the economy in America. Due to the economy, farmers were facing a price fall in the farm product. Farmers had to produce more farm product to earn more money to feed their family. During the 1930s because of the prices fall farmers went bankrupt and lost their farms. Unable to pay back the loans, banks with a legal process called foreclosures took away the properties and lands of the farmers. Dust bowl in 1930, brought droughts and led the agricultural production to go decline.
8: President Hoover called for a minimal government role in changing the economy.
9: otherwise known as the Smoot–Hawley Tariff or Hawley–Smoot Tariff, was an act implementing protectionist trade policies sponsored by Senator Reed Smoot and Representative Willis C. Hawley and signed into law on June 17, 1930. The act raised U.S. tariffs on over 20,000 imported goods.