I think this is the correct answer, but let me know if it is incorrect. People were having more children per family.
They were “of low physical and mental standards.” They were “filthy.” They were “often dangerous in their habits.” They were “un-American.”
“The view was they could not fit into the American orientation toward progress and doing better, and would be forever manual laborers stuck at the very bottom,” Diner said of attitudes toward Southern Italians. She said Jews, by contrast, were viewed as “a little too successful, a little too pushy, getting on that American track too fast. They were viewed as competitors.”
The answer is the third one
They were going to let the people decide for themselves if they where going to allow slavery in their territories.
World War I. Main article: U-boat Campaign (World War I)
See also: Mediterranean U-boat Campaign (World War I)
<span>Submarine warfare in World War I was primarily a fight between </span>German<span> and Austro-Hungarian U-boats and Atlantic supply convoys bound for the </span>United Kingdom<span>, </span>France<span>, and </span>Russia<span>.</span>