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yan [13]
3 years ago
11

List the ways that technology and social media have changed after WWII.

History
1 answer:
AVprozaik [17]3 years ago
3 0

Technology after WWll advanced greatly due to entering the atomic age. Following the bombings on Hiroshima and nagasaki, the U.S. entered the war in Vietnam where we used napalm bombs to burn down the forest because we found out that the Vietnamese were hiding in the trees. Then a couple years later the Cold War started and the U.S. built a huge amount of nuclear weapons at the same time that the Soviet Union was building nuclear weapons luckily we didn’t break out into war but there were a couple of times where we almost did. Now social media changed after WWll by creating even more political cartoons describing everything that’s happening in a single comic strip. Nowadays the whole world makes memes about previous and current wars that had happened or are happening right now.

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In what way was the Sherman Antitrust Act successful?
Maksim231197 [3]

Answer:

It allowed the government to break up the trust arrangement that the Standard Oil company had.

Explanation:

Approved July 2, 1890, The Sherman Anti-Trust Act was the first Federal act that outlawed monopolistic business practices.

The Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 was the first measure passed by the U.S. Congress to prohibit trusts. It was named for Senator John Sherman of Ohio, who was a chairman of the Senate finance committee and the Secretary of the Treasury under President Hayes. Several states had passed similar laws, but they were limited to intrastate businesses. The Sherman Antitrust Act was based on the constitutional power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce. The Sherman Anti-Trust Act passed the Senate by a vote of 51–1 on April 8, 1890, and the House by a unanimous vote of 242–0 on June 20, 1890. President Benjamin Harrison signed the bill into law on July 2, 1890.

A trust was an arrangement by which stockholders in several companies transferred their shares to a single set of trustees. In exchange, the stockholders received a certificate entitling them to a specified share of the consolidated earnings of the jointly managed companies. The trusts came to dominate a number of major industries, destroying competition. For example, on January 2, 1882, the Standard Oil Trust was formed. Attorney Samuel Dodd of Standard Oil first had the idea of a trust. A board of trustees was set up, and all the Standard properties were placed in its hands. Every stockholder received 20 trust certificates for each share of Standard Oil stock. All the profits of the component companies were sent to the nine trustees, who determined the dividends. The nine trustees elected the directors and officers of all the component companies. This allowed the Standard Oil to function as a monopoly since the nine trustees ran all the component companies.

The Sherman Act authorized the Federal Government to institute proceedings against trusts in order to dissolve them. Any combination “in the form of trust or otherwise that was in restraint of trade or commerce among the several states, or with foreign nations” was declared illegal. Persons forming such combinations were subject to fines of $5,000 and a year in jail. Individuals and companies suffering losses because of trusts were permitted to sue in Federal court for triple damages. The Sherman Act was designed to restore competition but was loosely worded and failed to define such critical terms as “trust,” “combination,” “conspiracy,” and “monopoly.” Five years later, the Supreme Court dismantled the Sherman Act in United States v. E. C. Knight Company (1895). The Court ruled that the American Sugar Refining Company, one of the other defendants in the case, had not violated the law even though the company controlled about 98 percent of all sugar refining in the United States. The Court opinion reasoned that the company’s control of manufacture did not constitute a control of trade.

The Court’s ruling in E. C. Knight seemed to end any government regulation of trusts. In spite of this, during President Theodore Roosevelt’s “trust busting” campaigns at the turn of the century, the Sherman Act was used with considerable success. In 1904 the Court upheld the government’s suit to dissolve the Northern Securities Company in State of Minnesota v. Northern Securities Company. By 1911, President Taft had used the act against the Standard Oil Company and the American Tobacco Company. In the late 1990s, in another effort to ensure a competitive free market system, the Federal Government used the Sherman Act, then over 100 years old, against the giant Microsoft computer software company.

Resource Used:

https://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?flash=false&doc=51

I hope this helps you in any shape or form.

4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What is a good History fair project
Anarel [89]
A pretty cool history fair project would be the history of Halloween and it's origins since it's a most here...I'd be pretty cool
5 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
2 Points
melisa1 [442]

Answer:

D

Explanation:

In WW1 not a lot of territory was gained, because soldiers were forced to stay in the trenches.

5 0
3 years ago
Starting in the late nineteenth century, thousands of South Asians and Chinese came to the Caribbean and South America to work a
Lynna [10]

The South Asians and Chinese immigrated to the Caribbean and South America to work as factory labor to fend for themselves.

<h3>Why did the Asians migrated to the Western sphere?</h3>

Majority of the Asian migration to Latin America in 1900s was because of the increase in high demand for manpower required for the expansion of capitalism in the western sphere.

Also, as the Asian had poor families who were on verge of starvation and suffering from trade wars, all these inflence their migration for better lives.

In conclusion, they immigrated to the Caribbean and South America to work as factory labor to fend for themselves.

Read more about Asian migration

<em>brainly.com/question/18388541</em>

5 0
2 years ago
Which political problems contributed to the fall of the western Roman empire?
irina1246 [14]
Lots of civil wars and the invasions of barbarians like the huns and other tribes brought down the empire since the senator could not get along and refused to fix the problem. 
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3 years ago
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