During the Five Year Plans Stalin created an almost pure command economy. If he needed food, he requisitioned it. If that didn't work, he had the country-side searched for private stocks which he confiscated, having first killed its owners. If he wanted to build a factory in the Urals, he sent people there to build it using food and materials he had requisitioned elsewhere. He killed maybe 15 million people he thought were opposing his policies. He also inspired workers very effectively, convincing them that they were building a new type of civilization, and were in fact becoming a new and better type of human being. He was helped in this endeavor by the fact that the entire rest of the world was manifestly against the Soviet experiment and wanted it to fail. The workers believed their lives depended on rapid industrialization, and given the rise of fascism, and their leaders murderous resolve, they were right.
Answer:
The 14th amendment protects individuals from getting their rights taken from them without due process first. It prohibits the states from depriving “any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”
Explanation:
Answer:
The unprecedented levels of production in domestic manufacturing and commercial agriculture during this period greatly strengthened the American economy and reduced dependence on imports. The Industrial Revolution resulted in greater wealth and a larger population in Europe as well as in the United States
Answer:
2. It was the final, decisive victory for Texian troops.
Explanation:
Answer: The Eisenhower Doctrine promised military support as well as economic aid to countries fighting communism. The Truman Doctrine had focused on economic aid.
Detail:
The Truman Doctrine was first stated by President Truman to Congress in 1947, and was mostly about providing economic aid. Truman stated: "It must be the policy of the United States to support free people who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures." Essentially, the Truman Doctrine pledged American aid elsewhere in the world to check the spread of communist and Soviet influence. The policy was first put into action in 1948 by providing economic support to Greece and Turkey to stave off communist movement in those countries.
The Eisenhower Doctrine was proclaimed by President Eisenhower in 1957. Eisenhower pledged to provide economic <u>or also military</u> aid, as needed, to any Middle Eastern country needing help in resisting communist aggression. This was in response to Soviet and other communist support to Egypt, and as a warning to the USSR in regard to the Suez Crisis of 1956.