There were two things, actually:
- Britain intercepted the Zimmerman Telegram
- Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare
Context/detail:
Public outrage in the US against the Germans swept the nation following the sinking of the British ocean liner, Lusitania -- but that happened before 1917. When a German U-boat (submarine) sank the Lusitania in May, 1915, over 1,000 persons were killed, including more than 100 Americans. The passenger liner was targeted by the Germans because they suspected weapons were being shipped to Britain in the cargo hold of the ship.
Germany managed to stave off American entry into the war at the time by pledging to stop submarine attacks. But a couple years later they resumed such attacks, and there was also an intercepted telegram (the "Zimmerman Telegram") that showed Germany was trying to secure Mexico as an ally against the United States.
In 1917, the US declared war on Germany in response.
Here are some I found...
Jaguar
Bears
yellowed tailed wooly monkey
I didnt look that deep but I found that, hope it helps
Franklin D. Roosevelt, in his speech "Four Freedoms", in 1941, mentioned some things that can be considered inconsistent with the US policy, because when he says: 1<em>) "The need of the moment....is to meet this foreign peril. For </em><em>our domestic problems are now a part of the great emergency</em><em>" and 2) "Just as our national policy in internal affairs has been </em><em>based upon a decent respect for the rights and the dignity ofall our fellow men..." </em>are not consistent with all the discriminatory practices blacks faced at that time.
It was about the cruelty and anti-Semitism in Nazi Germany. Though the film used a fictional country it nonetheless represented the Nazi Germany especially since it also persecuted the Jews. It also showed that not only Jews were targeted but those who opposed the regime’s policy were also arrested. It showed the plight of the Jews who also had to flee to other countries to survive. Many were herded to concentration camps where they died while others survived and were liberated by allied troops.
The correct answer is Plymouth Rock. This is where William Bradford and the Mayflower disembarked and where they established the Plymouth colony. The rock can still be seen and visited as a piece of history and it has a year engraved on it, 1620 because that's the year when they arrived.