Is was about getting revenge for the Arch Duke Franz Ferdinand yet many countries has peace treatise with many others so they all attacked one one-another
<span>Rome's twelve tables and Justinian's code contributed to a democratic system of governance or a Republic</span><span>The Twelve Tables, and Justinian's Code are examples of early developments in law. They were similar in that both provided a standardized system of laws which are a prerequisite in a democracy.</span>
The most important political leaders during this time were Theodore Roosevelt, Robert M. La Follette, Charles Evans Hughes, and Herbert Hoover. Some democratic leaders included William Jennings Bryan, Woodrow Wilson, and Al Smith. This movement targeted the regulations of huge monopolies and corporations.
So, a good answer to this would look at the following:
Economy:
The big difference between the North and South was the divide between industrial and agrarian. The Southern economy was heavily based on farming tobacco and cotton and used slave labor. The Northern economy developed into an industrial economy.
Social Structure:
Again, the Northern live was based around industrial bases located in urban centers. So, Northern social structures were based on merchant class structures while the Southern structure was based on who owned the largest plantation.
Daily Life:
Go into city v. country
Social Attitudes:
This is where the divide on slavery emerged. Religious differences between Unitarianism and Episcopal/Baptist faith fueled this
The concluding paragraph:
The question is asking you to take what you talked about above, particular in regards to geography, social structure, and daily life and apply it to the West. Does the West at the time sound more like New England's industrial urban centers or the South's spread out plantations in need of cheap workers?
During President Dwight Eisenhower's administration, he came up with the Domino Theory which said that if one nation in the Pacific falls to Communism, so will the rest of Southeast Asia. President John Kennedy agreed with this theory which led to the major actions that he took against the Vietnamese in the early 1960's.