Answer:
Its All three
Explanation:
I did it on Edge and tried just B and C and it said it was wrong but when I tried all three it was correct
Territories usually did not keep it's independence after a country annexed it. A perfect example would be the territories gained by the United States during the late 1800's and early 1900's. An example of a territory annexed by the US was Hawaii. This became a US territory and from there, created a government and laws similar to those of the other US states at the time. Eventually, this lead to Hawaii becoming a US state.
Another example is Puerto Rico. Even though Puerto Rico runs their own elections, their system of government was set up by the United States. The laws created in Puerto Rico were heavily influenced by the US. Based on these examples, you can see that annexed territories did not really keep their independence. Rather, they began to create political and social structures that were similar to the countries that annexed them.
The government regulates the economy for the benefit of the public through two approaches: monetary policy and fiscal policy. Through monetary policy, the government exercises its power to regulate the money supply and level of interest rates. Through fiscal policy, it uses its power to tax and to spend.
Everyone agreed, so the vote was unanimous.
Hope this helps~
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