Answer:
During the late 1800s new ways of American farming improved thanks to the development in farm technology and machinery. An example was the replacement of the horse power which was used to plough the land by the steam tractor (option d) that allowed farmers to introduce a great variety of crops and wheats (option c)
Explanation:
Not sure
President Franklin D. Roosevelt gave military authorities a significant amount of power to carry out Executive Order 9066. This order called for the removal of citizens with Japanese, German, or Italian ancestry into internment camps during World War II. This was done shortly after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941.
To carry out this order, the Secretary of War was given the power to deem certain areas as military zones. Any area named a military zone by the Secretary of War was one in which citizens could be forced into internment camps. This gave the military the ability to manipulate which areas were military zones in order to target specific groups of people.
Answer:
- loss of cultures
- exploitation of labor force
Explanation:
The globalization is a process that has many positives, but also many negatives, which is why it has many supporters and many critics. Two negatives of the globalization are the loss of cultures around the world, and the exploitation of labor force.
Through the cultural diffusion, it seems that the Western culture is prevailing over the others. With the younger generations being heavily exposed to it, they are adopting more and more of it, while neglecting their own cultures in meantime, resulting in rapid decline of lot of cultures.
The multinational companies have made lot of facilities in developing and less developed countries in order to make more profit. One of the reasons why they are able to make more profit is because the labor force is exploited. The workers get minimal wages, while working for more hours than their counterparts in the developed nations, often not having proper conditions for working or having their rights protected.