Answer:
The second answer
Explanation:
The passage is describing how industrialization is making everything the same, and monotone
Answer:
a. a strategically planned offensive
b. it gave allied troops a foothold in Europe
Explanation:
The D-Day operation was a carefully and strategically well planned operation. Normandy was targeted as the perfect place for this, and lot of troops were sent on the peninsula in order to push back the Germans and have a foothold in Europe. The numbers were on their side, and even though they had lot of losses, they managed to overcome the far fewer Germans. After they managed to secure the coast, more and more troops were coming as a support, and step by step they pushed the Germans back to Germany and out of France, taking the war in their own country.
Answer:
Market economies utilize private ownership as the means of production and voluntary exchanges/contracts. In a command economy, governments own the factors of production such as land, capital, and resources
Explanation:
<em>The canonical explanation for how Jews survived during the Holocaust involves some form of luck. To explore and deepen an understanding of episodic moments of luck, this article presents and discusses survivor Jerry Rawicki's close calls with death during the Holocaust. The first author examines Jerry's perspective as a survivor and her own perspective as a collaborative witness to his stories, as well as how these stories fit together within the broader literature about luck and survival. She suggests possible consequences of regarding luck as the sole explanation of survival and contends that agency and luck can go hand in hand even under oppressive structural conditions, such as the Holocaust. She concludes by reflecting on why Jerry and she might understand survival differently and on the importance of considering both positions in compassionate collaborative research.</em>