This theme is a very controversial one and there's lot of debate about it. Objectively, it is necessary that the people should give on some of their civil liberties, of course to a certain extent and to not be abused by the authorities, in order for the terrorist to be traced and stopped before they commit a terrorist attack. Lot of people are against this, as they are not very fond of having they privacy in the hands of the government, and that is understandable. Others are willing to give up full access to the government in order for the terrorist attacks to be prevented. The problem is that the terrorists are constantly using the newest methods to communicate, recruit, organize, so in order for the special services to be able to monitor things well, they have to intrude the privacy of the people to a certain degree, so unfortunately it seems to be a necessary method.
In brief:
World War 1 vs World War 2
• WW1 was mainly confined to Europe while WW2 had entire world as its theater.
• Warfare and arms used in WW1 were primitive in nature and the war was mainly fought digging trenches. On the other hand, airpower was heavily used in WW2 with atom bombs dropped in Japan being termed as the Holocaust.
• Radio got invented which was heavily used in WW2 while there were only landline phones in WW1
• Germany suffered defeats in both WW1 and WW2 but while it wisely acknowledged defeat in WW1, Hitler chose to fight till the bitter end in WW2 leading to mass destruction
• WW2 saw 7 times more casualties than WW1
• There was only Mustard gas as WMD in WW2 while Atom bombs were used for the first and last time as WMD in WW2
• League of Nations was born with the end of WW1 while the end of WW2 gave birth to United Nations
• WW1 was based on imperialism while WW2 was a result of the clash of ideologies
Answer:Union officers got so many valuable pieces of intelligence from slaves that the reports were put in the special category “Black Dispatches.” By ...
Explanation:
Great britain is the answer.
Answer:
Thomas Jefferson, John Ads, Benjamin Franklin