There is something that needs to be shown in order to answer this question like a map or a piece of evidence
Answer:
B
Explanation:
A is not right it didn't end any colonialism, C is wrong because there are leaders in a government system, D is also wrong because its not the Emancipation Proclamation that freed all slaves in the south and in the north.
Answer:
The misfortunes in the Middle East were faltering: the war not just attacked the land and pulverized armed forces, it decimated entire social orders and economies. Thusly, the experience of World War I in the Middle East is maybe more likened to the experience of World War II in Europe.Nov 16, 2015
Explanation:
The misfortunes in the Middle East were faltering: the war not just attacked the land and pulverized armed forces, it decimated entire social orders and economies. Thusly, the experience of World War I in the Middle East is maybe more likened to the experience of World War II in Europe.Nov 16, 2015
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached we can say the following.
Do the economic benefits of free trade outweigh the social costs?
Not really, and it all depends on the perspective.
From the big companies and industrial side, free trade has been a success. Free trade has allowed thousands of companies to export their goods with cero import tariffs, benefiting the income. It has allowed multinational companies to go abroad and establishing branches in different parts of the world, basically in underdeveloped nations.
Once there, they paid very low salaries, much less than what they should have paid in their former countries, That is a reason why they moved to underdeveloped countries. So cheap labor is one reason. And other these multinational companies freely exploit the many raw materials and natural resources of that underdeveloped country.
Meanwhile, free trade makes rich people and corporations richer, and poor countries and poor people continue to be as poor as they have always been. No serious progress at all,