Answer: hmmm i have not learned this yet hold on....................................... sorry cant answer this one to hard
Explanation:
to hard
For more than a decade after its passage, the Sherman Act was invoked only rarely against industrial monopolies, and then not successfully, chiefly because of narrow judicial interpretations of what constitutes trade or commerce among states. When it was first passed, the Sherman Antitrust Act was largely ineffective at stopping industrial monopolies. Courts at the time tended to hold a very narrow view of what constituted “trade or commerce among states,” and most companies were not held liable under the act. For more than a decade after its passage, the Sherman Antitrust Act was invoked only rarely against industrial monopolies, and then not successfully. Ironically, its only effective use for a number of years was against labor unions, which were held by the courts to be illegal combinations.
Answer:
Explanation:
There are several, but historians argue the most terrifying event for the US was the Soviet atomic bomb detonation.
September 1949, the Soviet Union exploded its own atomic bomb and this shocked the U.S. because now both nations could destroy each other. -This was the world's first human-made satellite.
The second event was the cold war. The main reason why the United States was fearful of the Soviet Union in the "Cold War" was because the US was afraid that communism would spread around the world and ultimately to the US--which they viewed as being a threat to their way of life.
Answer: for number 1
Explanation:
The constant competition between the US and the USSR often made other nations into opportunities for one side to gain an advantage over the other. The Cold War also spread the worldwide fear of nuclear war, which heavily influenced international diplomacy and affairs. ...
I believe the correct answer is the vikings.
Hope it helps!