The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached we can say the following.
The connection between Germany's defeat in World War I and the rise of anti-Semitism in Germany in the 1930s can be found in the rise to power of Nazi leader Adolph Hitler in 1933.
The Weimar Republic had failed and the German people were desperate because they had no money and the democracy the Republic had tried to establish, did not work out well. Germany did not have enough money to pay for teh World War I reparations as agreed in the Treaty of Paris, and there was so much discontent.
Everything was set to the arrival of Adolph Hitler who had extreme and supremacist ideas since he had written his book titled "My Struggle" a classic book of National Socialists ideas in which is included anti-Semitism ideas.
On apex the answer is C the expanded use.
Could you rephrase your question please?
Answer:
What Asian americans struggles after WW2?
Explanation:
By 1940, people from many different ethnic and racial groups made their home in California. A set of maps show the distribution of racial and national groups in the greater Los Angeles area, based on the 1940 US census. Asian groups listed include Japanese, Filipino, and “foreign born from Asia.” A news photo taken shortly before Pearl Harbor shows a diverse group of chefs at a Los Angeles restaurant — a Filipino, a Japanese American, and a Chinese American. According to the caption, "And they get along too."
During the War
As the century progressed, Japanese Americans became established in industries related to growing and selling produce and flowers. By the time of the US entry into World War II, these industries were thriving, and many Japanese Americans had entered the middle class.
After the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, however, the federal government rounded up and relocated 120,000 Californians of Japanese descent in the name of national security. Dorothea Lange took the photograph of farm families boarding an evacuation bus in Centerville, carrying parcels (evacuees were only allowed to take what possessions they could carry). Two-thirds of the Japanese Americans were actually American born, and thus citizens. Most were incarcerated in 10 remote and guarded “relocation camps” for more than two years, despite never being convicted — or even formally accused — of a crime. Conditions were bleak in the camps: a photograph shows a man resting on a cot after moving his possessions into a cramped room; and a painting by internee artist Estelle Ishigo portrays a family at home in the camps. To prove their loyalty and patriotism, many men joined the segregated all-Japanese American 442..