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uh sorry I'm new to this and i clicked on it and I dont know how to get out of it
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The German nightmare was a war on two fronts. Historically, Russia needed time to ‘mobilize’, that is, to call up reservists, equip them, and assign them to their regiments and platoons. So the logical way of operating was to attack and defeat the French first, before attacking the Russians. But in 1914 the Russians cheated; they mobilised before they announced it so their army was in the field quite a long time before the Germans expected it — and the dreaded war on two fronts materialised. The Germans were lucky in that their effective commander Ludendorff (who was technically 2ic) moved his troops about by train, so they were not already exhausted by a long and hurried march and were able to throw the Russians back into complete confusion and surrender.
So the Russians were defeated but not mortally injured, the French came close to defeat but just managed to stabilise a front, and the ‘despicable English Army’ saved itself from disaster by the narrowest Of margins.
Four years of continuous bloody slaughter were assured.
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Even still, the revolution marked the end of a dynasty that had lasted 300 years and concluded with the seizure of power by a small revolutionary group. The tsar was replaced with a Council of People's Commissars and private ownership was abolished.
i think on 1892 but i am not so sure
<span>Medicare and Medicaid were part of the Social Security system developed during the New Deal under President Franklin Roosevelt.
The Social Security Act of 1935 created the Social Security Board to oversee the new programs of social insurance to care for workers in their old age, as well as providing unemployment insurance, aid to mothers of dependent children and blind and physically disabled persons.
The Social Security Board was renamed the Social Security Administration in 1946. In 1965, under the Lyndon Johnson administration, the Social Security Act Amendments were passed and signed into law, creating the health benefits programs known as Medicare and Medicaid.</span>