they hated them
Many southerners in the mid-1800s viewed the North with suspicion and resentment. They saw the North as economically and politically dominant, and believed that its growing industrial power threatened the traditional agrarian way of life in the South. Southerners also resented what they perceived as interference by the North in their institution of slavery.
Causes of the Nativism1. Cultural/Racial - Fear and Anxiety about differences: racial, cultural, religious and linguistic differences. Nativists view immigrants as fundamentally different and dangerous to American norm, believe immigrants can cause fragmentation in the society and fear of non-white majority.2. Economic - Economic Change: Immigrants are the reason for the loss of status or security of American workers, usually due to some large structural change in the economy. Immigrants offer cheaper labor with more working hours and no benefits.3. Political/Ideological - Xenophobia (fear of foreigner) or scapegoating of immigrants as a reaction against US global involvements or domestic civil unrest. Fears that foreigners will undermine American Democracy (papism, monarchism, fundamentalism) or fear of violence (terrorism, activism).
dispite the distaste most people have for immigrants they have brought new ways to make food; i.e. tacos enchiladas etc, and they contributed to music like mariachi bands. Those are some of the biggest contributions
The US view on nclear proliferation is that it should stop.
diverse cultures view the American Dream as an great opportunity for them to get better in life.
The nativists in the late 1800s viewed the new wave of immigrants with a little resentment.
The Nativist view of language acquisition is that it is innate. Language learning is not something that a child does, it is something that happens to a child placed in an appropriate environment.
Immigrants were considered second-class citizens for their poverty. Irish, German and Chinese immigrants were treated harshly and many were denied work. They were looked down upon because of their culture. Although America boasted being a "land of the free", poor immigrants had little employment opportunities.
nativist view.
Education was the keysuccess for the immigrants.
A growing fear of immigrants & catholics
Mostly they didnt trust them at all that's the answer to the question if not look them up on your social studies book you dumazz......
true
dilute European culture
Buy looking thru a stereoscopic viewer with viewer cards. It is like looking into a viewmaster from the mid 1800's you can see historic details you cannot imagine!
The nativist view proposes that humans are born with innate biological abilities that facilitate language acquisition. This perspective suggests that the human brain is pre-wired to acquire language and that universal grammar principles guide language development. Proponents of this view, such as Noam Chomsky, argue that environmental input alone is insufficient to account for the complex nature of language acquisition, highlighting the role of genetic predispositions.
This phenomenon is called the "critical period" theory, which suggests that there is a unique window of time during early childhood when language acquisition is especially rapid and successful. The nativist view posits that humans are born with an innate capacity for language learning, which is why children are able to learn language so quickly and effortlessly.