Amusement parks were closed to people of color, motels would not accept guest that were of color
Religious tolerances and value of creation was the American values that came from the Puritan of 1600s.
Answer:hope we can be friends
can i please get brainliest
Glasgow: maybe not as pretty as Edinburgh, but in it’s own way it is. The people are really warm especially to strangers. It’s wetter but not as cold (when the wind comes off the Forth it would cut you in two). Lots of nice museums (The Riverside Museum, The Hunterian Museum, People’s Palace which are all free to enter). Lots of green spaces, it’s known as That Dear Green Place after all. Great music scene now and in the past.
Edinburgh: maybe prettier than Glasgow, but I don’t think so but then I’m biased. The people? Not so warm especially towards strangers. It’s drier but a lot colder when windy. It’s got a castle and now nice new shiny trams. Some nice Art Galleries and museums. They do have the International Festival in August every year which is excellent.
Explanation:
<span>President Truman decided to use the bomb for many reasons. Having not knowledge about the existence of the bomb until his presidency, he saw it as a new weapon developed by the US and that should be used for that purpose. Secondly, Truman wanted to avoid an invasion of Japan because it would be extremely costly, difficult, and simply horrible. It also meant the loss of many more American lives since the Japanese attacks were so brutal. Truman hoped that the use of the bomb would and it's astonishing effects would be enough for Japan to surrender and they would not have to invade them. Lastly, Truman wanted to use it to show the soviets of it's power for post world war II policies. I personally believe that Truman did the right thing. It was evident in all the battles in the pacific that Japan was extremely stubborn and would do anything but admit defeat. Just taking over the underpopulated islands on the way to Japan was very difficult because of the Japanese's tireless efforts. I think that the only way to make them surrender was to scare them into a surrender. The back and forth combat wasn't completely useless but exhausting and would make the war last longer than needed.The Japanese were so focused on fighting and trying to harm us, that they trained their soldiers to die in the desperate kamikaze attacks. I really don't think that invading their homeland would lead to a surrender or end to the war. Not only would they not surrender, but many american lives would be lost in the process unnecessarily. The bomb was ready, and functional.</span>
More powerful air force radar and message decoding technologies.
The Germans made efforts to bomb Royal Air Force airfields and take out Britain's radar defense system, but the outnumbered RAF fighters managed to outmaneuver their opponents, aided by radar technology.
As for message decoding technologies, the code-cracking machine developed by Alan Turing had an impact particularly on naval battles in the Atlantic between the Germans and the Allies. Once they developed the ability to decode German messages, the British had to proceed carefully and not act on every military message or the Germans would have suspected their encoded messages were being hacked.