they wanted to improve life for eveyone in there cities... Jackie aka mar mar
They wanted to improve life for everyone in their cities.
True
True
All of the above.
the answer is true
Yes there were middle class women in the industrial revolution. They were raised to become good house wives and mothers.
I've discussed this in class with my teacher. I believe it is true, but too controversial for many people to admit it.
In Marxist thought, false consciousness is when a person of the working class sees his position in society as something that is in conflict with reality--for instance, a false view of his subordination to power or his exploitation by the powerful. A classic example of false consciousness is how many working-class Americans believe that they are middle class; people barely above the poverty line will actually claim to be "middle class." What many of these people fail to realize is that, technically, they cannot be middle class if they don't own businesses. They work for a business owner or owners. Ergo, they are the working class. False consciousness has numerous ramifications for people experiencing it. They often support government policies that are detrimental to their own interests, such as relaxing workplace safety regulations or changes to the tax code that benefit the ownership class, not the working class.
It is true that the Presidential election of 2004, Bush stressed jobs and a middle-class tax cut. President Bush stood by his tax-cut policy as the correct measure to get the economy growing.
The Answer is true.
whats wrong with middle class or poor women why wealthy?? it wont be true love u will fall in!!
No. The increase in the power of the Church happened in the Roman Empire at a time when the economic and political power was mostly in the hands of the military. In the Middle Ages, the aristocracy gained military power, and the rise of the middle class only happened during the Middle Ages after that.