In their competition for power, nations raced to colonize as many places as possible, since colonization meant an increase in raw materials, as well as usually an increase in labor force through exploited natives.
Answer:
D. Atomic programs.
Explanation:
None of the Asian Tigers ever developed nuclear weapons of its own. American pressures did not allow the launching of native atomic weapons programs in Taiwan and South Korea; they, as Japan, were under the nuclear umbrella of the United States (Taiwan only until 1979-1980). In Hong Kong and Singapore, it was not an issue.
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C. Muslim
In Arabic, the translation for Muslim is a person who submits to the will of Allah, God.
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In the last two decades of the 19th century, railroads had made sweeping changes in the lives of many of Texas' mostly rural, mostly agrarian citizens and forever altered the face of the state. Settlements formed around temporary railroad-workers' camps. Speculators created brand-new towns out of virgin prairie beside the gleaming rails. And existing communities that were bypassed by the tracks often curled up their municipal toes and died unless they were willing to pick up businesses, homes and churches and move to the rails.
The arrival of railroad transportation expanded Texas farmers' and ranchers' markets by providing faster and cheaper shipping of products. Cattle raisers were no longer forced to trail their herds long miles to railheads in the Midwest. In their classic Texas history text, Texas, the Lone Star State, Rupert Richardson, Ernest Wallace, and Adrian Anderson summarized it this way: " ... railroads were the key to progress and prosperity at the end of the 19th century."
Answer:
Explanation: