He had a plan called "Fourteen Points" and at the end of World War I, a 14-part plan for peace presented by President Woodrow Wilson to Congress on January 8, 1918. The first goal of Wilson's peace plan was to eliminate the causes of wars.<span>A second key goal was to ensure the right to self-determination for ethnic groups so they could control their own political future and setting up an international organization called the League of Nations to ensure world peace.</span>
I’m assuming D cuz it’s the 1800s
Im pretty sure it would be Loius XIV hope i helped
Answer:
Much of that growth was taking place not in the actual cities but in their neighbouring municipalities. It is worth noting that there have been several resource extraction towns founded in the last 100 years but no new cities. The late 19th century saw the birth of every major city in western Canada (apart from slightly older Victoria and New Westminster), but the only truly new centres in the 20th century are satellites and suburbs of the largest metropolises. Mississauga, Brampton, Surrey, Laval, Markham, Vaughan, and Burnaby are examples drawn from the largest 20 cities in Canada, none of which contained more than a few thousand in 1914, all of which are very near or past the quarter-million mark now. Each of these began as peripheral, spillover, bedroom communities associated with a larger urban centre and, in that respect, they were very typical.
I believe they targeted Christians..