Answer: even when the change will benefit them
Explanation:
He assured the nation business is on a sound, and a prosperous basis. Hope this helped.
Answer D. United Nations
<em>The Universal Declaration of Human Rights</em> was adopted by the <em>United</em> <em>Nations General Assembly</em> in 1948. This important document defends the freedoms and rights of people everywhere, it declares that the human rights are universal, also that the dignity is the base for justice and freedom. Cultural, social and economic rights are include in it.
I believe the Berlin Airlift was necessary because Berlin was located in East Germany (a Soviet satellite) and at this time (the cold war) there were geopolitical tensions between the Soviet Union and the United states. so because of this the only viable option to supply west Berlin was to do an Airlift.
Answer:
Eric Hobsbawm, the Marxist British historian, wrote a book called The Short Twentieth Century. The 20th Century had been shorter than other centuries because it had begun in 1914 with the outbreak of the First World War and terminated of course early in November 1989 with the fall of the Berlin Wall. The problem however, and of course we historians we like problems, is that everybody knew what we had left behind with the fall of the wall, but nobody knew what we were heading towards. As Douglas Hurd, the British Foreign Secretary at the time, put it, “this was a system [the Cold War], this was a system under which we had lived quite happily for 40 years.” Or as Adam Michnik, again my Polish solidarity intellectual, put it “The worst thing about communism is what comes afterwards.” While our populations were in jubilation in front of the television screens or on the streets of Berlin, governments were, it has to be said, seriously worried about the implications of this unforeseen, uncontrolled and uncontrollable collapse of the Warsaw Pact and the communist system. Tom Wolf, the American author, at the time had a bestseller called the Bonfire of the Vanities and a British MP that I knew at the time famously rephrased that as the ‘bonfire of the certainties.’ All of the reference points with which we’d lived for half a century and which had organized our diplomacy, our military strategy, our ideology, were like as many props that were suddenly pulled from us.