Old fashioned because it means old and out of date
Here are your matches:
- JOSEPH STALIN = wanted to prevent future threats from Germany
- WINSTON CHURCHILL = wanted free elections in Eastern Europe
- FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT = wanted Soviet help against Japan
Context/explanation:
US president Franklin Roosevelt, British prime minister Winston Churchill, and Soviet premier Joseph Stalin, the leaders of the Allies in World War II, met at Yalta in February, 1945.
Roosevelt wanted to get Stalin to agree to Russia's entry into the war against Japan -- and Stalin agreed to that (in exchange for the promise of territory returned to Soviet control that had been lost to Japan in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05). Stalin kept that promise. In August 1945, Soviet troops invaded Manchuria to battle occupying Japanese forces there. The Soviets also took control of northern Korea away from the Japanese.
Churchill in particular (along with Roosevelt) pushed strongly for Stalin to allow free elections to take place in the nations of Europe after the war. At that time Stalin agreed, but there was a strong feeling by the other leaders that he might renege on that promise. The Soviets never did allow those free elections to occur. Later, Winston Churchill wrote, ""Our hopeful assumptions were soon to be falsified." Stalin and the Soviets felt they needed the Eastern European nations as satellites to protect their own interests.
<span>This was the time of the Clutural Revolution, It ran from 1966-1976 and included Mao Zeong's political policy that was meant to end his rivals and begin training the younger generation of chinese people to engage in the revolutionary spirit that had originally created communist China. In the end, the revolution caused mass jailings, deaths by the thousands, beatings, and terror.</span>
<span>Part of the 14th Amendment emphasizing that the laws must provide equivalent "protection" to all people. </span>"Equal protection of the laws," as provided in the 14th Amendment, is understood to mean "equal protection of life, liberty, and property," for all