<span>Tin is your answer to your question </span>
Answer: Losing secret papers to the enemy could have serious consequences.
Explanation:
The central idea here is that when secret papers are lost to the enemy, they could have serious consequences. This is why the both the British and the Americans tried to capture riders conveying messages for the other side so that they could get the messages.
If these messages were found, they could help in the war effort by implicating spies such as George Higday who would be put to death should evidence be found of their treachery. This would be good for the side that was being spied on as less information would be leaked and bad for the other side as they will have less information to act on.
<span>it exerted pressure on the new Obama administration to do something about the crisis
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It is one of the media success stories of performing its role as both an informer and channel for pressurizing governments and those in authority to commit to the public good. These has been identified as one of the most important media roles in a democracy.
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Answer:
Explanation:
Hitler appointed Hjalmar Schacht as President of the Reichsbank in 1933 and Minister of Economics in 1934. He created a bunch of public works programs which were supported by deficit spending. But then Hjalmar Schacht created a scheme for deficit financing, so capital projects were paid for with the issuance of promissory notes called "Mefo bills" and because "Mefo bills" wasn't Germany's official currency so it didn't show on their federal budget. But then that fell through, and the government basically made banks buy federal bonds so the German government could pay back the "Mefo bills". But Schacht achieved a rapid decline in the unemployment rate, the largest of any country during the Great Depression because of his public works and by 1938, unemployment was basically non-extinct.
Answer: The Reforms under Julius Cesear
Explanation: