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How did historians from the 1970s to the 1990s view how FDR handled the great depression in the 1930s?.

*This is for plato*

A) they believed in his program were. sort of halfway Revolution and there was still a lot more that he could have done

B) they believed that his New Deal programs were a revolutionary response to a revolutionary situation

C) they believed that he handled the great depression the best he could at a time when Americans society was not open to sweeping forms

D) they believed that he should have focused more on wealthy redistribution improvement of race relations and industrial regulations

Respuesta :

Its C
C) they believed that he handled the great depression the best he could at a time when Americans society was not open to sweeping forms 

The correct answer is A) they believed that he handled the great depression the best he could at a time when Americans society was not open to sweeping forms.

Historians from the 1970s to the 1990s considered that FDR handled the great depression in the 1930s "the best he could at a time when Americans society was not open to sweeping forms."

United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt tried to fight the Great Depression with his program called "New Deal." This included many projects aimed to help Americans with the economic problems that they were living. The government created the Farm Security Administration,  the Civil Conservation Corps, the Civil Works Administration, and the Social Security Act.