<span>The statement
"The man who mobilized the crowds in Moscow to restore Mikhail Gorbachev
to office was Boris Yeltsin," is a true statement. The answer to the
following statement is true. It is Yeltsin who assemble the crowds or the
concentration.</span>
At the beginning of his career, Boris Yeltsin was a strong supporter of Mikhail Gorbachev. Gorbachev's objective was to revive the Soviet economy, and in order to do so, he wanted to reform the political and social structure of the USSR. For this purpose, Gorbachev gathered a team of young, talented Communist Party members, of which Yeltsin was part. Yeltsin rose through the ranks and in 1986 he became a member of the Politburo. However, Yeltsin would eventually become critical of Gorbachev's "moderation" and would defend the implementation of a representative democracy.
In the 1920s, Georgia experienced a severe drought that devastated the economy. Unlike the boll weevil which destroyed cotton, the drought affected all agricultural crops. Many farmers lost money because their production decreased, which resulted in either less profits or losing money.
Many historians agree that westward expansion was indeed the primary source of contention between the North and South in the sense that it made the question os slavery unavoidable. Each new state had to be determined slave or free--leading to disagreements that led to the Civil War.
It would be the term "c. inflation" that refers to an economic situation where the large amount of money in circulation creates continuous pressure to raise prices, since the value of the money actually decreases.