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Brilliant_brown [7]
4 years ago
13

How did soviets use propoganda

History
2 answers:
sineoko [7]4 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Anti-fascism was commonly used in propaganda aimed outside the USSR during the 1930s, particularly to draw people into front organizations. The Spanish Civil War was, in particular, used to quash dissent among European Communist parties and reports of Stalin's growing totalitarianism.

Explanation:

stiv31 [10]4 years ago
3 0

The ideological propaganda of capitalism and communism did not arise in the Cold War. It had been happening since the 1920s, with the consolidation of communism in Russia; it grew in the 1930s during the Great Depression that affected capitalist countries (see Crisis of 1929), and intensified globally after the end of World War II and in the context of the Cold War.

Soviet propaganda pointed to the huge social inequalities, misery, unemployment and moral decay of the capitalist world. It denounced the racism and prejudice existing in capitalist countries as discriminatory laws and violence against the black population of the United States. On the other hand, he emphasized the superiority of the communist regime, in which the State guaranteed jobs, education and housing for the citizen. He valued the collectivist spirit of communist society in which industrial and agricultural production was distributed equally to the population. He emphasized that the communist economy was planned to avoid economic crises and financial oscillations so common in capitalist countries.

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From the questions above it would have to be <span>President Clinton and Congress. (since Clinton did not want to agree on a set plan for Medicare that was made by  republicans)</span>
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3 years ago
What happened at Concord in April of 1775?
velikii [3]

Answer:

<u>The British retreated from the fierce fighting of the minutemen. </u>

Explanation:

About 700 British soldiers, led by Lt. Col. Francis Smith, were given a secret order to seize and destroy military supplies collected by the Massachusetts militia at Concord. With the help of efficient data collection, the colonial patriots learned of the attack weeks before the march that could jeopardize their supplies and move them elsewhere. They also received details of the British plans the night before the battle and were able to quickly alarm regional militias about enemy movements.

The first shots were fired at Lexington at dawn. Militias were outnumbered and forced to withdraw, and British troops continued on to Concord, where they were looking for supplies. At the Old North Bridge in Concord, about 500 American fighters defeated three British troops. <u>British troops retreated from US positions after the open air battle. </u>

More American fighters soon came to grips and caused heavy losses to the British as they retreated to Boston.

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3 years ago
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What did the British navy do that affected the colonies during the war?
jonny [76]

The correct answer is D. They formed a blockade of American ports.

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In what ways did the Great Depression affect Germany, Austria, Britain, and France?
noname [10]

Answer:

Nearly two decades after leaving the White House, Herbert Hoover knew precisely where to place the blame for the economic calamity that befell his presidency—and it wasn’t with him. “The primary cause of the Great Depression was the war of 1914-1918,” the former president wrote in his 1952 memoirs. “Without the war there would have been no depression of such dimensions.”

The president scapegoated by many for the economic disaster certainly had the motive to point the historical finger away from himself, but some economists and historians agree with Hoover’s assessment that World War I was the foremost of several causes of the Great Depression.

“There can be little doubt that the deepest roots of the crisis lay in the several chronic infirmities that World War I had inflicted on the international political and economic order,” wrote historian David M. Kennedy. “The war exacted a cruel economic and human toll from the core societies of the advanced industrialized world, including conspicuously Britain, France and Germany.”

“World War I and its aftermath is the dark shadow that hangs over the entire period leading up to the Great Depression,” says Maury Klein, professor emeritus of history at the University of Rhode Island and author of Rainbow’s End: The Crash of 1929. “Pick any policy you want, and you can see how it leads back to World War I.”

America Retreats From the World

While the United States emerged from World War I not only as the world’s leading economic power, but scarred by its involvement in what many Americans saw as a purely European conflict. The disillusionment with World War I led to a retreat from international affairs.

“America was going to make the world safe for democracy and came out disgusted with the whole thing,” Klein says. “The United States emerged as the logical leader on the world stage and then cut out of that role.”

Not wanting to be saddled with the cost of a European war, the United States demanded that the Allies repay money loaned to them during the conflict. “The Allies took the position that if they had to do that, then they would have to collect reparations from Germany that could be used to repay the war loans,” Klein says.

German Reparations Weigh Down Europe

Council of Four at the WWI Paris peace conference, May 27, 1919 (L - R) Great Britain Prime Minister David Lloyd George, Italian Premier Vittorio Orlando, French Premier Georges Clemenceau, U.S. President Woodrow Wilson. The treaty signed at the conference saddled Germany with billions of dollars in reparations.

As a result, the punitive Treaty of Versailles required Germany to pay billions of dollars in reparations to Great Britain, France, Belgium and other Allies. “The Peace is outrageous and impossible and can bring nothing but misfortune,” wrote economist John Maynard Keynes after resigning in protest as the British Treasury Department’s chief representative to the peace conference. In his international bestseller The Economic Consequences of the Peace, Keynes argued that the onerous reparations would only further impoverish Germany and exacerbate the damage caused to the European economy by the war.

What ensued was a vicious flow of money back and forth across the Atlantic as American bankers lent money to Germany to pay reparations to the Allies to repay their debts to the United States. With the Allies refusing to ease reparation terms, Germany defaulted on its payments in 1923, and its economy further crumbled when factories shuttered after France and Belgium occupied the industrial Ruhr region to force German repayment.

To come up with the money to meet its obligations, Germany accelerated its currency printing, which caused such hyperinflation that the German mark became virtually worthless. The exchange rate of the German mark to the American dollar plummeted from 32.9 to 1 in 1919 to 433 billion to 1 by 1924. The paper on which German marks were printed had more value as kindling or children’s building blocks than as currency.

Economic Barriers Restrict Trade

While the crippled European economy whimpered, the American economy roared through the Twenties. However, Klein says social changes to the United States as a result of World War I laid the groundwork for the ensuing economic freefall.

“Due to the role they played during the war, businessmen emerged as knights in shining armor,” Klein says, “and the business of the country is business.” Policies enacted by successive Republican administrations resulted in both large tax cuts for big business owners that widened income inequality and a lack of regulation on banks and Wall Street that some historians connect to the start of the Great Depression.

Explanation:

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Susan B anthony they both wanted the same thing but yet were not the same group
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