Question
What was a major factor that made the U.S. immigration policies more exclusionary and isolationist in the late 1800s?(1 point) Responses
An influx of non-White immigrants caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants from Britain, Germany, and Ireland.
An influx of non-White immigrants caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants from Britain, Germany, and Ireland.
An influx of non-White immigrants caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants that came from non-European countries.
An influx of non-White immigrants caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants that came from non-European countries
. An influx of immigrants of less diverse ethnicities caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants from non-European countries.
An influx of immigrants of less diverse ethnicities caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants from non-European countries. An influx of immigrants of less diverse ethnicities caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants from Britain, Germany, and Ireland.
An influx of non-White immigrants caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants from Britain, Germany, and Ireland.
An influx of non-White immigrants caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants from Britain, Germany, and Ireland.
An influx of non-White immigrants caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants that came from non-European countries.
An influx of non-White immigrants caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants that came from non-European countries
. An influx of immigrants of less diverse ethnicities caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants from non-European countries.
An influx of immigrants of less diverse ethnicities caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants from non-European countries. An influx of immigrants of less diverse ethnicities caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants from Britain, Germany, and Ireland.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The most accurate response to your question is:
**An influx of non-White immigrants caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants that came from non-European countries.**
This response accurately reflects the historical context of U.S. immigration policies in the late 1800s, which increasingly favored European immigrants while becoming more exclusionary towards those from non-European nations, driven by racial and ethnic biases.
**An influx of non-White immigrants caused concerns about racial purity in the U.S. This drove public opinion toward isolationism and pushed policies that restricted and excluded immigrants that came from non-European countries.**
This response accurately reflects the historical context of U.S. immigration policies in the late 1800s, which increasingly favored European immigrants while becoming more exclusionary towards those from non-European nations, driven by racial and ethnic biases.