They wanted the holy land back
Answer:
option 1 and option 4 because for lower class people there no equal rights as higher class people and it is an identity to know that the person belongs to which caste
It was too profitable not to expand and to cater to the growing population.
Explanation:
USA's white population grew incessantly during the <u>Westward expansion as it was a state sponsored policy to move to the west and displace the indigenous people from their wild but fertile lands.</u> It was simply too profitable for the US to use the land which to them was till now untapped.
<u>There was also no real concern for the life of the native Americans due to the racism prevalent in white America.</u> None of the administrators was really concerned with conservation of their culture.
Answer: Was no longer aligned with the Soviet Union after 1948
Explanation: During the Second World War and in the years immediately afterwards, Yugoslavia was a very close associate and aligned with the Soviet Union. Formation of the government and the state in Yugoslavia immediately after WWII was carried out in the same way as in the countries of the Eastern Bloc, it is imposed on communism. Considering that the lifelong president of Yugoslavia, Tito, was a very authoritative ruler, he did not endure the constant involvement of the Soviet Union and Stalin in the internal affairs of the state. There were also disagreements over the view of communism itself, but the essence is that Stalin wanted to be the supreme communist leader and all the communist states. Thus, in 1948, the Soviet policy was abandoned, and the period of communist Yugoslavia began, which was the only Eastern European state to have a lot of Western influence. Any mention of Stalin in Yugoslavia after 1948 meant going to long-term sentence and re-education. What can be seen from the map, Yugoslavia was closely connected with the USSR only until 1948. Yugoslavia has never been a member of the Warsaw Pact, which was planted after 1948, but under all post-war circumstances, it was part of the Eastern Bloc until 1948.