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Aneli [31]
3 years ago
5

Explain the U.S policy of neutrality before WWII

History
1 answer:
Triss [41]3 years ago
3 0

Congress passed a series of Neutrality Acts between 1935 and 1937. This were intended to prevent American bankers and arms makers from providing loans or selling arms to nations at war. Following the horrors of World War I, Americans did not want to be involved in another war hence the






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2. Describe Japanese sculpture before it was influenced by countries on the mainland
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Archeologists have found examples of early Japanese sculptures around burial mounds that date to the 4th and 5th centuries. The sculptures are clay figures of armored warriors, saddled horses, robed ladies, and objects such as houses and boats. They were probably meant to accompany or protect the dead.

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What is mutually assured destruction? How did it affect the way the USSR and USA interacted with one another?​
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Mutually Assured Destruction, or mutually assured deterrence (MAD), is a military theory that was developed to deter the use of nuclear weapons.

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At first, the US air force military wanted to continue to use nuclear weapons to counter additional threats from communist China. But although the two world wars were filled with technological advances that were used without restraint, after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, nuclear weapons came to be both unused and unusable.

The MAD strategy was developed during the Cold War, when the U.S., USSR,  held nuclear weapons of such number and strength that they were capable of destroying the other side completely and threatened to do so if attacked. Consequently, the siting of missile bases by both Soviet and Western powers was a great source of friction.

Mutually Assured Destruction is based on fear and cynicism and is one of the most brutally and horribly pragmatic ideas ever put into practice. At one point, the world really did stand opposed to each other with the power to wipe both sides out in a day.

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3 years ago
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<span>I believe that the correct answer is (b). As the tribe divided over voluntary removal, Elias Boudinot and John Ridge became the two Cherokee leaders of opposite viewpoints. Boudinot considered that the removal was inevitable and signed the Treaty of New Echota in 1835 with other treaty supporters. On the other hand, the chief of Cherokee nation, John Ridge, tried to stop white political leaders from forcing them to move; he was backed by the majority. Their resistance resulted in the "Trail of Tears" (Nu na da ul tsun yi (the place where they cried)) in which one-fourth of the Cherokee forced to move died.</span>

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What was the real reason behind the argument between joe and janie that started when she incorrectly cut the plug of tobacco?
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<span>Joe realized he wasn't as young as he used to be. He started to pick on Janie because of his fear of his own age.</span>
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