Yes, I do think so.
The reason for this is that I think it would be likely that people born and raised in America would feel that Great Britain, which was far away and did not understand Americans' needs and situations, should not rule over them. So I feel that a similar struggle for independence would have happened anyway.
The main differences from Quaker colony to others in British America was that they believed in religious freedom and that any religious minority could worship freely without fear of being persecuted, jailed or killed. This made this colony become an ethical and religiously diverse colony because it attracted religious minorities with open-minded citizens.
One of the main differences was that the Quaker colony had a pure democracy, one did not have to own property to vote or participate in politics. It was also the first abolitionist colony,
That's not a question, that's a statement. But this is what they are asking
match each nation with the conditions that helped to trigger it's shift to fascism.
titles:
a gov't weakened by an invasion and civil war.
paranoia that discontent would threaten power.
economic burden of paying other nations for reparations.
fear and confusion due to an economic crisis from 1928 to 1932.
failure to get the promised territories for participation in WWI.
pairs:
Germany
spain
Italy
soviet union
japan
I don't know the answer, I just stumbled over this trying to find the answer
Answer:
C
Explanation: im taking the test right now and this is what i chose