Which war? WWI: We were isolationists until illegal German U-boats sank a United States commercial ship called the Lusitania.
WWII: We were isolationists until December 7, 1941 when the Japanese air fleet surprise attacked and bombed us at Pearl Harbor.
It’s B because I looked it up lol
The answer is option 4: <u>He believed in the absolute power of kings.</u>
The England King James I (who ruled from 1603 to1625) clashed with the Parliament's ideas several times for his persistent belief in the absolute power of kings, justified for their divine right, which enabled him to rule over all their subjects without interference from anyone. Instead, the Parliament believed that the King must not rule alone, doing all that he pleased.
They both had very different views on how royal finances had to be handled as well as foreign affairs, for example, the Parliament members held that tax collection was an issue that had to be approved by them in order to improve the crown's finances, which had been seriously weakened by the long war with Spain (1585-1604), as for James I, he wanted to collect the taxes on his own, whose purpose wasn't only to improve the government but also to over-spend on his luxury way of living.
Immigration was certainly a key factor in the growth of America's economy . The Industrial Revolution came with massive technological developments, and the chance to exponentially improve the production rate of factories. However, to operate these emerging industries it would take a tremendous amount of laborers. American citizens working alone, weren't going to be enough. In other words, the peak of immigration influx allowed the U.S. to take full advantage of the possibility at the right time.
Hope this helps!
Answer: self-determination was placed in only for Europe, and not in the outer territories and this came to be known as the system of mandates.
Explanation: The system of mandates led to freeing some of the colonies under German control only for them to be put under control of the allies such as England and France.
Self-determination is a political principle an is the process by which a group of people form their own state and choose their own government. In World War I the Allies accepted self-determination as a peace aim.
In Eastern Europe, when the German, Austrian, and Russian empires fell, many nations emerged and this self-determination led to the creation of many nations such as Czechoslovakia, Poland, the Baltic states, and Yugoslavia. However, by creating mandates outside Europe, the treaties ignored non-European peoples' right to self determination.