B. China's huge population. <span>The central idea behind the Great Leap was that rapid development of China's agricultural and industrial sectors should take place in parallel. The hope was to industrialize by making use of the massive supply of cheap labor and avoid having to import heavy machinery. </span>
The main event described in the article is the attack on Pearl Harbor in the World War II. There were multiple causes which led to this event.
1. Americans wanted to stay neutral in the upcoming war, due to the atrocities of the World War I. "Americans remembered the horrors of World War I, which took place from 1914-1918. They hoped to stay out of the problems in Europe this time."
2. The Great Depression influenced the crisis in Europe, and brought Hitler and the Nazis into power. USA wanted to stay isolated from these events and keep their neutrality. "In the 1930s Americans were more worried about their own problems than problems in Europe".
3. In order to help the British, Roosevelt needed to change the legislation but still keep USA neutral. They decided to "lend" weapons and ammunition to their allies in order to help them fight Hitler. "The United States could simply lend Britain weapons to fight the war."
4. United States finally entered the World War II when Japanese attacked the US military ships on Perl Harbor. "Faced with an assault on its own forces, the United States finally entered the World War II."
Answer:
True.
Explanation:
You can technically build a "cities" without waterways, however, it further complicates transportation, trade, and relations with other cities. For a city to thrive, it must have some way of being able to transport goods, resources, and people from the place to anywhere else, and back. Waterways, paved roads, pathways, and later planes and helicopters are all ways of transportation. However, the most natural and easiest one was by waterways. Waterways utilized boats, which can generally hold more than any land transportation at the time, and uses the current for travelling, which typically can help speed, or even impede the transportation process.
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A. The rise of isolationism in the congress.
After WW1 people were petrified to become involved in anything. Even before WW1 they were. Congress as well as the nation became pro isolationism (the refusal to be involved in other nations business). They rejected it because they worried that they would end up in another war.