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Vlad [161]
3 years ago
12

What form of "new media" has had the biggest effect on the way people live,

History
2 answers:
Leno4ka [110]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

D. The Internet

Explanation:

Cell phones do not have a big effect without the internet. Satellite radio is very out of date and people don't usually use this to communicate or conduct business. Television has a huge effect on people but is not used to communicate whatsoever. The Internet is the gateway to communication and conducting business and has a huge effect on how we live today. Internet brings people together and lets you work from home and very easily and effectively.

RUDIKE [14]3 years ago
7 0
The Internet because it affects the people around us.
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After the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, President Woodrow Wilson lobbied extensively for US support for the League of Nations, believing that an international representative body would prevent future wars. The US Senate, however, refused to approve participation in the League. The United States never joined the League of Nations, nor ratified the Treaty of Versailles.

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International unrest in the 1930s, including Japan’s occupation of Manchuria, Italy’s invasion of Ethiopia, Nazi Germany’s remilitarization and territorial seizures, and the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, threatened US isolationism. In response to these conflicts, the US Congress passed a series of Neutrality Acts, designed to prevent American involvement in these conflicts. Longstanding diplomatic practice held that countries unwilling to become involved in a conflict had to maintain strict neutrality; even economic sanctions, or selling arms to one belligerent but not the other, could be considered acts of war. The Neutrality Acts, therefore, defined the terms of American neutrality to the world.

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Portrait of Secretary of State Cordell Hull signing the president's Neutrality Proclamation.

Cordell Hull signs neutrality proclamation

Portrait of Secretary of State Cordell Hull signing President Franklin D. Roosevelt's neutrality proclamation. September 5, 1939.

National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, MD

View Archival Details

On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland, leading Great Britain and France to declare war on Germany. Americans who were polled immediately after the war began overwhelmingly hoped for the defeat of Germany, but more than ninety percent opposed getting involved in the war. A majority did not want to join the fight even if Nazi Germany defeated Great Britain and France.

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