The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached we can say the following.
The quote is "if the Treaty of Versailles war fair, the Second World War would not have occurred."
I can justify this statement? in the following way.
The victorious allies in World War I forced Germany to pay for war reparations. Yes, France and Great Britain did not really want a peace treaty. They wanted retribution and forced Germany to pay for all the destruction created during the war.
Germany was especially opposed to Article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles because it held Germany (and Austria) responsible for the war and required reparations. Germany also was forced to disarm its military.
In the end, this also resulted in a substantial loss of territory for Germany. All of these decisions and actions created so much pain and resentment in Germany. They helped set the stage for European conflict that would eventually result in World War II.
Answer:
Stimulus discrimination
Explanation:
Stimulus discrimination is a term that is used in both the concept of classical conditioning and ope-rant conditioning. It is the concept about to differentiate between two same stimuli. It is a concept in which a person or animal will learn to discriminate the difference between the conditioned and unconditioned stimuli.
Thus in the above statement, In Pavlov's classical conditioning, the dog discriminates between the conditioned stimulus (bell) and unconditioned stimulus buzzer.
The excessive money spending by the government. There is no free lunch. If the government spend too much money in something, it is not going to have money to attend other needs.
Women have ZERO rights and men hold all the power.
Answer:
Option D.
Explanation:
Introduced the first public works projects in American history, is the right answer.
John Rolfe played a significant role in the history of colonial Virginia. Among others, he was the first settler who introduced the first public works projects in colonial Virginia. He is attributed with the first prosperous cultivation of tobacco as a shipping crop in the Colony of Virginia. He introduced this project following his experiments employing the seeds planted in the West Indies to develop Virginia's leading practical export.