Alright :) I'm glad you figured it out.
Answer: It consolidated the political interests of the US, Great Britain, and the USSR in the postwar period.
Explanation: SO you didn't show Source 2. But, this is generally the answer
Answer:
The Second World War, propaganda and anti-Semitism
In September 1939, shortly after Germany invaded Poland, Joseph Goebbels, the Reich Minister of Propaganda, dictated a memo demanding more Nazi ‘wall newspapers’, or posters. ‘Everywhere in the Reich where there is dense traffic, poster boards of the Nazi party are to be set up’, Goebbels insisted. ‘All means of transport (railroad, streetcars, subways, buses, and so on) will receive posters, which are to be placed in every wagon, on the train platforms, in the ticket windows, as well as in the entrances to these forms of public transport’ (fig.2). As historian Jeffrey Herf explains, ubiquitous political posters – named Parole der Woche, distributed by the thousands every week from 1936 to 1945 and strategically displayed all over Germany – were a primary means of asserting Nazi ideology and, in particular, radical anti-Semitism.2
Explanation:
Answer:
Kenneth C. Royall
Explanation:
The secretary of war was a member of the U.S. president's Cabinet, beginning with George Washington's administration.
Here is an explanation of tariffs. Since I can't see the statements for this question, you can use the following information to help.
Tariffs are a tax on an imported goods. These tariffs cause the price of foreign goods to increase. Many businesses, especially in the North, like the idea of tariffs because it makes more likely that citizens will buy products made by them rather than buying products made in other countries. Ultimately, a tariff helps to protect American industry/businesses.