Religion played a big role in the nobility’s lifestyle.
The correct answer is (3).
Stalin believed that having satellite states would help prevent future wars
because satellite countries would be indebted to and protect the Soviet Union.
After the Yalta conference in 1945, Stalin argued that the Soviet Union should
lead in rebuilding Eastern Europe and get ahold of the “satellite states” (Poland,
Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, and East Germany), but allow them
free elections and independent future plans. He didn’t hold up to this
agreement, but indebted this countries around Soviet Union and used them as a
shield. <span>These states were called “satellites” because
they were held in the orbit by the gravitational pull of the Soviet Union.</span>
Answer:
1)both restricted personal liberties and treated minorities poorly
2) both take rights away from citizens under the guise of progress and Public Safety
3) both lead to tyrannical leaders will gain control in the name of progress
4) both offer hope to a country that has faced desperation depression and extreme duress
5) both would disdain American and British governments
Explanation:
- Nazism is the ideology of the regime that ruled Germany from 1934 to 1945 with the coming to power of the National Socialist German Workers Party of Adolf Hitler (NSDAP). Hitler instituted a dictatorship, the self-proclaimed Third Reich. The Reich joined Austria from the Anschluss, as well as the Sudetenland as well as Memel and Danzig. During the Second World War, the Nazis occupied land in France, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, the Netherlands, Denmark and Norway. The Germany of this period is known as Nazi Germany.
- Fascism is an ideology, a political movement and a type of totalitarian and undemocratic state; created by the Italian leader Benito Mussolini, spread in interwar Europe from 1918 to 1939. Among the features of fascism is the exaltation of values such as the fatherland or race to keep the masses permanently mobilized, which has led to frequency to the oppression of minorities (Jews, gypsies, homosexuals ...) and a strong militarism. In this sense the enemy is identified as an external entity, unlike the typical left-wing totalitarianisms in which the enemy is internal (bourgeoisie).
A period of civil unrest and lawlessness in the English colony of the province of Maryland.