The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Some people think that if the government had greater control in regulating the economy, the Great Depression would not have happened. Others disagree. They believe that a free market economy lets consumer choices have the greatest say in the direction of the economy and produces the best outcomes for the most people. I agree with the first one because if you totally allow the market and people to dictate the flow of the economy, then you have those kinds of consequences. After the consumerism behavior of the "Roaring 1920s," most people bought things on credit. But the lack of some kind of government regulation took things to the extreme and that is when the United States stock market crashed on October 29, 1929, beginning the Great Depression. 
I think the best position is a balance between government regulation is special or extreme conditions and letting the free market dictate the economy.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Low wages and taxes caused by the involvement of Russia in WWl
        
             
        
        
        
The best and most correct answer among the choices provided by the question is the second choice "<span>Less supportive of the War of 1812"
</span>The War of 1812<span> was a military conflict that lasted from June </span>1812<span> to February 1815, fought between the United States of America and the United Kingdom, its North American colonies, and its Native American allies.</span>
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I hope my answer has come to your help. God bless and have a nice day ahead!
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B and C makes sense to me 
 
        
             
        
        
        
Concentration camps for Japanese in the United States accommodated some 120.000 people, mostly ethnic Japanese, more than half of whom were US and Japanese citizens from Latin America, mainly from Brazil and Peru, who were deported under pressure of the US government, in establishments designed for that purpose in the interior of the country, during 1942 and 1948.
The objective was to move them from their habitual residence, mostly on the west coast, to facilities built under extreme security measures. The fields were closed with barbed wire fences, guarded by armed guards, and located in places far from any population center. Attempts to leave the camp sometimes resulted in the dejection of the inmates.
The measure was taken as a reaction to the attack on Pearl Harbor during World War II, where the United States belatedly joined the allies fighting against the axis forces.