The correct answer to this open question is the following.
I do not agree with what John Green said.
John Green stated that it might have been better if the Persians beat the Greeks. His arguments were that the Persian life was not bad. Persians ruled prosperous cities. And he comments that life was not easy in ancient Greece if you were a woman or a slave.
Of course, Greece was not perfect and had many issues. But the Persia Empire also had its many issues too.
I think it was good that Greece won the Persian Wars. The Greek victory established a foundation of a classical time in which Greece "exported" the idea of democracy to other states, as well as the philosophical ideas of great thinkers of Athens. Arts, literature, sculpture, and architecture were other important Greek influences that transcended the test of time.
When Vladimir Lenin passed on in 1924, the acting General Secretary of the Communist Party was<u> D. Josef Stalin </u>
<u>Josef Stalin:</u>
- Was the acting General Secretary of the Soviet Communist party when Lenin died.
- Went on to become to most powerful man in the Soviet Union a few years after the death of Lenin.
Using his power as the General Secretary, Stalin was able to put people who supported him in key positions in the party and this allowed him to take over the whole party and country.
In conclusion, option D is correct.
<em>Find out more about </em><em>Stalin </em><em>at brainly.com/question/903446. </em>
They had to pay poll taxes, and pass a literacy test
The correct answer is:
It broadened job opportunities for women.
Women started to take a big role in industrializing, the job opportunities were bigger because the majority of men was gone to fight the war, leaving the spots for women and african americans.
Answer:
German paper marks rapidly lost value between 1918 and 1923
Explanation:
Between the period 1918 ans 1923, the German economy crumbled rapidly and it had enormous inflation, resulting in large scale poverty in the country. This can be seen very well from the presented graph, as at 1918 one paper Mark was almost equivalent to one gold Mark. Then as the years pass by the paper Mark starts to lose on value, and by 1921 it is almost 1,000 paper Marks that were the equivalent of one golden Mark. From 1922 we have a sharp loss of value of the paper Mark continuing in the next 1923, with the end result being one billion paper Marks to be equivalent to one gold Mark.