The Gilded Age:
Positive
The major economic issues in the Gilded Age during this time were the tariffs and currency. The free enterprise was damaged due to the monopolies being demanding and taking over. The rich people had lots of power and many advantages.
Negative
Unhealthy & Dangerous Working Conditions. The Gilded Age saw a rise in unhealthy and dangerous working conditions. ...
Monopolies. Companies emerged during this era that sought to eliminate or get rid of competition. ...
Government & Business Corruption. The government practiced laissez faire economics..
Answer:
The likelihood of her remembering an actual event is very slim
Explanation:
Due to the fact that Tom recalls the incident his 8 year old daughter is trying to relay to him happened in a cartoon, it is unlikely it happened for real.
The 8 year old is telling her father Tom, that her toy was ran over by a car in an event that happened years ago. Her father remembers that was a scene from a cartoon so it is very likely that what the 8 year old thinks was a real event was in fact her recalling the cartoon and interpreting that it happened to her.
An 8 year old's brain isn't fully developed to differentiate reality and fantasy and as such, such occurrences are not rare.
Answer:
President Jackson made a policy of Indian Removal and forced the Native Americans to move away and stay elsewhere. The place in which they stayed is now present-day Oklahoma.
Revenue is the amount of money they are taking in. However, this doesn’t account for all of their expenses. The owner still has to pay rent, pay their workers, and buy merchandise. The revenue minus the expenses is the net profit. $2000 dollars is not a lot per month. That revenue, minus all the expenses, could create a loss, in which the Foot Locker costs more to run than the revenue they are bringing in. If the expenses are $3000 per month, the owner has a loss of $1000 per month. Having a loss like that makes it hard to keep the business open because there just isn’t enough money to run it.
The Truman Doctrine arose from a speech by President Harry S. Truman. He established that the U.S would provide political, military, and economic assistance to all democratic nations under threat from external or internal authoritarian forces. It effectively reoriented U.S foreign policy, away from its usual stance of withdrawal from regional conflicts not directly involving the United States, to one of possible intervention in far away conflicts.