There is a role for the United Nations still as a Peacekeeper in today's world because they can't necessarily force a country to make or keep peace but they can go to a country with a smaller war going on and slowly make peace and as they progress with the small countries they can move onto the bigger countries to make peace.
When President Truman took a hard line against striking workers in the years immediately following World War II, he:
"had little understanding of the plight of laborers in the post-war years."
During the first months of his administration, he became involved in a struggle between coal miners and railroad workers. It took several meetings, and fierce arguments, to get them to agree, and end the strike.
This is a long question please rephrase it.
No it did not alter the war on the Allie’s side. Many of the soldiers felt petty and sorrow for the people in the death camps but militarily wise the air force knew of the death camps and could of bombed certain facilities in the death camps to disturb and save lives but they wanted to save there logistics and focus them on the war effort
Slave labor during to the Punic Wars affected small farmers in that: It hurt them because large farms who used slaves as laborers could sell products cheaper.
<h3>What were the Punic Wars?</h3>
- The Punic Wars were a series of wars that were fought between the Roman empire and the Ancient Carthage between 264 and 146 BC.
- These wars had a terrible effect on the farmers who were threatened by the larger farms. When the competition became severe for them, they gave up their farms and went to the cities.
Learn more about the Punic Wars here:
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