The answer is True.
FDR's policies were greatly influenced by Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt as he listed them as two of his political mentors.
Generally speaking it was the "bankers" who were opposed to Andrew Jackson's policies, since Jackson viewed himself as a "man of the people" who was generally against big banks.
It’s hard to imagine the United States without a large central government. Americans often forget that the Founders disagreed vehemently regarding the size/form/structure that our new governement should take. These disagreements first resulted in factions (Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists) and eventually led to the development of America’s first political parties.
Option A, The United States was in a period of demobilization after WWI.
<u>Explanation:
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The 1918-20 recessions were a severe deflationary contraction from 14 months after World War I. The depression was not only severe; the deflation was large compared to the subsequent downturn in the actual product, in the United States and in other nations.
After Armistice Day, short depression in the United States was accompanied by a rise in production. Nevertheless, the 1920 depression was also caused by the post-war changes, especially the demobilization of troops.
The reintegration of soldiers into the civilian labor force was one of the main changes. There were 2.9 million people working in the Military in 1918. This declined in 1919 to 1.5 million and in 1920 to 380,000.
It was 1920 when civilian labour rose by 1.6 million or 4.1 percent in one year, and the effects on the labor markets were most startling. (This is the highest one-year rise in labor force, although it is lower than the figures during the sub-World War II demobilization in 1946 and 1947)
The one that most accurately describes a belief of Alexander Hamilton is: <span>The central government is, at best, a necessary evil.
Alexander Hamilton once told Thomas Paine that<em> </em></span><span><em>"Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil in its worst state, an intolerable one."
</em><em />He believed that the existence of a central government will indeed limit the freedom of the people, but it is important to protect the citizens from Chaos.
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