<span>Historians need to be as accurate and honest </span>as possible in terms of telling the story of the
past. <span>
<span>Sifting through lots of information requires patience
so I would not pick impatience.
</span></span>
<span>While all humans have some bias, all the social
sciences as sciences strive to minimize bias. So I could not choose bias as a
character trait important for historians. </span>
<span>On Labor Day, Bryan delivered
a widely renowned dialogue in which he recommended that one of the tenacities
of government was to lay “rings in the noses of hogs” which shows a allusion to
regulation of trusts, though Bryan suggested that such 'hogs' should still be permitted
to get 'fat.' Both Democrats and Republicans retorted with cartoons classifying
other 'hogs' to be well-ordered.</span>
Signs point to North Korea unilaterally launching the invasion. It was not helpful for the USSR and was at a very bad time for the PRC since the war immediately shut down plans to invade Taiwan.
The U.S., especially after Chinese troops entered the war, viewed it as a united and aggressive communist bloc brashly taking over one more country and likely to try more if not resisted. US defense spending shot back up to wartime levels (though far from the WWII peak) and stayed there.
China also viewed it as a feeler for aggression that would go further if not resisted. Both countries were overinterpreting local issues as global ones.
The dramatic reverses were all in the first year, followed by two years of stalemate before the armistice.
False because it’s false because it’s false
Answer:
it is a dwarf planet, they say