The true answer is the first one.
And here some comments on all the answers:
<em>Children were required to attend educational programs about Nazism</em>
There were many such programs, and the best known was "Hitlerjugend" and the association of German Girls - for girls
<em>Hitler announced that Gypsies and Slavs were exempt from the fascist "purging."</em>
This is not true - they just weren't the first priority
<em>Nazism is actually a form of democracy.</em>
This is completely false - it's a totalitarian system, not a democracy.
<em>Mussolini turned France into a Fascist government.
</em>
False! Mussolini was an Italian ruler so he turned Italy into a fascist country.
Because Rome needed to be protected from neighboring Aequi who had surrounded the Roman army, and the council.
Andrew Jackson worried that annexing (aka adding) Texas to the US would divide the nation because Texas would enter the Union as a slave state. During the early to mid 19th century, US presidents were constantly trying to balance the number of free and slave states. Their reasoning behind this is that they did not want any side (aka free states or slave states) gaining too much power in Congress.
During this time, Northern politicians were worried that having a lot of slave states in Congress would result in the slave states making slavery legal in all of the new territories gained by the US during the 19th century. The Southern politicians were worried that if free states controlled Congress, they would try to make a law/amendment to get rid of slavery.
Answer:
The Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, or the GEACPS, was an imperialist concept which was developed in the Empire of Japan and propagated to Asian populations which were occupied by it from 1931 to 1945. It extended across the Asia-Pacific and promoted the cultural and economic unity of East Asians, Southeast Asians, South Asians and Oceanians. It also declared the intention to create a self-sufficient bloc of Asian nations which would be led by the Japanese and be free from the rule of Western powers. The idea was first announced on 1 August 1940 in a radio address delivered by Foreign Minister Yōsuke Matsuoka.
Explanation: