Lyndon B. Johnson's "Great Society" is very similar to FDR's "New Deal."
Both of these policies were aimed at helping American citizens by having more government intervention in everyday life. For example, FDR created several new federal agencies that still exist today to help citizens. This includes the Social Security Administration and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The Social Security Administration helps to provide financial assistance to elderly citizens while the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation helps to protect an individuals savings in banks that are licensed by the FDIC.
Lyndon B. Johnson also has lasting programs that help American citizens. Two of the most famous ones are Medicare and Medicaid. These help to cover medical costs for elderly American citizens and individuals who live below the poverty line.
Stalin signed a nonaggression pact with Germany because he knew that Europe was on the brink of another major war, and he wanted time to be able to build up the Soviet military.
Explanation:
The voyages of explorers had a dramatic impact on European trade. ... Exploration and trade led to the growth of capitalism. This system is based on investing money for profit. Merchants gained great wealth by trading and selling goods from around the world.
Missionaries were the first group from the United States to settle in Hawaii. They were followed by the businessmen. Then, the military came.
American Protestant missionaries lead by Reverend Amos Starr Cooke settled in Hawaii on 1837. He set up a school to educate future monarchs. He became the unofficial adviser to the King, one of his previous students. Cooke influenced the king's decision to devise a land reform that allows businessmen to buy land from the locals and become sugarcane planters.
Hawaii's location is ideal for strategic warfare, thus, the military settled there.
Answer: b. Built a huge ancient empire
Explanation: Pachacuti was the ninth Sapa Inca of the Kingdom of Cusco that triggered the transformation of that kingdom into the Inca Empire.
During his reign, an era of conquest began that, in three generations, expanded the Inca domain from the Cusco Valley to much of western South America, so, while Pachacuti was in power, Cusco went from a simple village to be an empire that ended up surpassing Chimú.