Answer:
The period from the end of World War II to the early 1970s was one of the greatest eras of economic expansion in world history. In the US, Gross Domestic Product increased from $228 billion in 1945 to just under $1.7 trillion in 1975. By 1975, the US economy represented some 35% of the entire world industrial output, and the US economy was over 3 times larger than that of Japan, the next largest economy. The expansion was interrupted in the United States by five recessions.
$200 billion in war bonds matured, and the G.I. Bill financed a well-educated work force. The middle class swelled, as did GDP and productivity. The US underwent its own golden age of economic growth. This growth was distributed fairly evenly across the economic classes, which some attribute to the strength of labor unions in this period—labor union membership peaked during the 1950s. Much of the growth came from the movement of low-income farm workers into better-paying jobs in the towns and cities—a process largely completed by 1960.
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<span>The Allies would accept from the Axis Powers in terms of surrender provided that </span>b. The Axis Powers would have to give up completely without any compromises.
B. He was a Marxist who became disillusioned with the repressive policies of the Soviet government.
He was a Revolutionary, so he couldnt be in the Tsar’s army, so its not A.
He wasnt a supporter of Feliks’ Dzierżyńskis Cheka (kind of a police, very brutal), which we know both from his biography aswell as from this text, so its not C.
D. No, he said that the commune state was his (their) dream, and Kerensky was even a noble, which was not good for the commune state.
It caused people (African Americans) to want to stand up for their selfs