True
The Republican Party was created in 1854. Its main objective was to abolish slavery in the US. Among the members of this arty was a group known as radical Republicans. They wanted slavery to be abolished at once no matter what the economic or social consequences might be the result. Moderate Republicans like President Lincoln sought a slower and constitutional solution to gradually abolish slavery.
the moderate republicans believed that blacks should not have their rights. The radical republicans had a vision of whites and blacks living in the same community without fighting," even a hundred years later they will still have this same problem, that they solved in the 60's called the civil rights movement and Martin Luther King Jr was a key figure in this issue. Back to the 1800's they both thought they should live together without fighting.
saving for retirement is the job of citizens, not government
Well.... they believe in it. They sure do. Now on the other hand.... Republicans don't believe in it.
Langston Hughes
yes
The Republicans Do
he wanted to stop it by compromising something
Mary Wollstonecraft advocated for women's education, equality, and empowerment. She argued for women's rights to education and employment, and critiqued the social norms that oppressed women, advocating for changes to these societal structures. Wollstonecraft believed in the importance of women's independence and agency in shaping their own lives.
republicans come from a tradition which up to recent times advocated a military and political solution. nationalists favour the political method only. both aspire to a united Ireland. republicans would also be more radical in economic theory etc than most nationalists. in present terms the differences are largely historical and social.
social equality mean social that people live and have respect right the same right other and they have freedom, right for life .
social reformer who advocated for women share in the property
b
Education
Hobbes, Locke Rousseau
W.E.B. Du Bois believed in racial equality and advocated for social and political rights for African Americans. He was a co-founder of the NAACP and believed in education and political activism as tools for achieving racial equality. Du Bois strongly criticized Booker T. Washington for his accommodationist approach to racial issues.
gender equality and race equality