<span>"If you are going to try to go to war, or to prepare for war, in a capitalist country, you have got to let business make money out of the process or business won't work." Secretary of War Henry Stimson made this comment in 1940 as preparations for World War II (1939–1945) gained momentum (quoted in Koistinen, p. 580). The global war would pit Allied forces, eventually composed primarily of the United States, Britain, China, and the Soviet Union, against the Axis powers consisting primarily of Germany, Japan, and Italy. U.S. businesses would play a key role in the mobilization efforts for war and the New Deal policies and programs would be largely curtailed. Funded by large military contracts, industry provided millions of new jobs and higher incomes than had been available through the Great Depression when millions of workers had lost their jobs or faced pay cuts. The mobilization effort focused on industry producing massive amounts of war goods including ships, tanks, arms, ammunition, and warplanes. Due to the strong U.S. public mood against international alliances, however, it took Roosevelt almost six years of lobbying with Congress, industry, and the public to begin earnest mobilization efforts.</span>
The arrival on the Europeans <span />
We know so little about early Native American culture
because European diseases killed off many Native Americans and many tribes did
not have written language so historical evidence is limited. Early Native
Americans maintain tradition through oral means. Since majority of elderly
Native Americans got killed off during the plague there were little information
about their way of life.
Answer:
Theravada (also known as Hinayana, the vehicle of the Hearers), Mahayana, and Vajrayana.
Explanation:
Theravada-the more conservative of the two major traditions of Buddhism (the other being Mahayana), and a school of Hinayana Buddhism. It is practiced mainly in Sri Lanka, Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, Cambodia, and Laos.
Mahayana-one of the two major traditions of Buddhism, now practiced in a variety of forms especially in China, Tibet, Japan, and Korea. The tradition emerged around the 1st century AD and is typically concerned with altruistically oriented spiritual practice as embodied in the ideal of the Bodhisattva.
Vajrayana- the Tantric tradition of Buddhism, especially when regarded as distinct from the Mahayana tradition from which it developed.
hope this helps my friend