The correct answers to these open questions are the following.
1. Do you think that the business executive who made this statement would be in favor of or against free trade? What makes you think so?
What I think is that times are changing and are very different from the time of "Made in America."
In this modern-time, globalization rules, and free trade are the direct consequence of globalization. Many American companies have decided to go abroad and built fabrics and industrial plants in other countries because in those developing countries they pay low salaries and can get more profits selling their products. American companies have been greedy too.
2. What do you feel about the number of imported items you can buy in stores? How might free trade affect these numbers?
As I mentioned above, it is part of free trade in a globalized world. Yes, the United States imports many things, but let's remember that the US also exports many goods to other countries. So this is call balance, in which countries negotiate to have a balance in trade. Countries export, yes, but they also have to import goods, so all the countries win.
The best example is the free trade agreement called NAFTA, now USMCA, between México, Canada, and the United States.
During the time of the war, the Allied and Axis Powers were the primary belligerents, but the United States still had their "hands-off" stance with international affairs. Though the United States did not directly fight in the war until 1918, they did assist their allies in Great Britain by secretly sending supplies by sea vessels across the Atlantic.
In 1915, a German U-Boat sank the RMS Lusitania, a British ocean liner, carrying British and American citizens to Liverpool. This was ultimately the determining factor for America to join the war, as it put America and Germany on thin ice. America ordered Germany to stop their U-Boat campaign, and when the commenced it again, America entered the war to stop them once and for all.
Are strategic waterways that have been the center of conflicts..
Answer:
Tendon Vibration Technique
Explanation:
Tendon Vibration Technique is a procedure in which movement is observed while proprioceptive feedback is distorted rather than removed.