In the traumatic aftermath of World War One, many questioned whether man's civilization had revealed a dooming weakness, and if one of its greatest achievements—democracy—was only a fragile ideal. Did the war to make the world "safe for democracy" expose a world unfit for democracy? And what about America? For 130 years the republic had survived chronic growing pains and a murderous civil war, but was it, too, displaying signs of dissolution and rot? Voter apathy, corruption in city politics, the "tyranny of the fifty-one percent," the suppression of black voting in the South—American democracy seemed worn, cracked, and vulnerable.
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Flees and Rats that were spreading the disease
The correct answer is D: States.
<em>*When referring to the geographic delimitation of North American's countries, the matter isn't uniform. Some specialists in the matter state that North America spans three countries: Canada, the United States and Mexico. Others also include Central American's countries in the delimitation. And, even others only consider the U.S. and Canada as part of North America. The following answer is based on the first delimitation given.*</em>
The most numerous in North America are the States, which in total are 89.
- Number of States in North America: 89.
32 states in Mexico, 49 states in the United States (the U.S. has 50 states in total, however in North America are only 49 since Hawaii is geographically located in Oceania) and 10 provinces in Canada (Notice that Canada uses the term "Province" to describe its divisions).
Canada, The United States and Mexico.
North America is bounded by the Arctic Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean.
New England, The Foundry, Dixie, The Breadbasket, The Islands, Mexamerica, Ecotopia, Québec and The Empty Quarter.