asked 171k views
4 votes
(please help!)

What was the life for migrants in the 1920s?
A: They were accepted by americans
B: they owned their own land in the west
C: they faced non-immigrants feelings
D: they were respected for their work

2 Answers

4 votes
The anwser is d I’m not sure about the reasoning, I asked one of my family members for help
answered
User Nishant Ghodke
by
8.4k points
5 votes

Answer:

C

Step-by-step explanation:

In the 20s the USA was considered isolationist, America for the Americans so when a influx of immigrants came in they faced harsh feelings from the born and bred Americans.

This can be confused with racism, if what happened in the 20s happened now it would be but there is a difference between not wanting someone in your country based on race and not wanting someone in your country based on the times ideals. We need to stop judging people from over a century ago like we would today, it was a different time, different ideals and different motives. I am not discounting the presents of racism obviously but pointing out the cultural influences at the time.

that was for free lol

answered
User CBGraham
by
8.7k points
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.