I would think return to normalcy is always the goal.
<span>and from a little researching, i would say that at least harding's policies had a positive effect. </span>
<span>"Revenues to the treasury increased substantially. Unemployment also continued to fall. Libertarian historian Thomas Woods contends that the tax cuts ended the Depression of 1920–1921 and were responsible for creating a decade-long expansion.Historians Schweikart and Allen attribute these changes to the tax cuts. Schweikart and Allen also argue that Harding's tax and economic policies in part "... produced the most vibrant eight year burst of manufacturing and innovation in the nation's history." The combined declines in unemployment and inflation (later known as the Misery Index) were among the sharpest in U.S. history. Wages, profits, and productivity all made substantial gains during the 1920s."</span>
Coming and going from the forest were beef and pork and lard, buffalo robes and bear hides and deerskins, lumber and lime, tobacco and flour and corn. It was the cotton bales and hogsheads of sugar, stacked high on the levee, however, that really made the New Orleans economy hum.
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Not all Hadiths were created equal. Some were just hearsay, not well sourced.
hope this helps
have a good day :)
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burial ground. ... What do the Hopewell culture's elaborate burials tell about them? They had an extensive trade network.
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