Answer:
Answer: B. Japan's easy success led to more Japanese invasions.
Context/details:
In 1931, Japan invaded and occupied Manchuria, the northeaster region of China. The invasion followed an explosion that blew up a portion of railroad tracks near the city of Mukden. (Thus it became known as "The Mukden Incident.") The railway was owned by the Japanese, who had invested in development in the region. Japan blamed Chinese nationalists for the explosion, but others thought the bombing may have been done by Japanese military personnel to provide Japan with an excuse for invading and occupying Manchurian territory. The Japanese declared the region to be a new country, independent of China. which the Japanese called Manchuko. In reality, the territory was not independent but was controlled by the occupying Japanese army.
The League of Nations condemned Japan in 1933 for the events in Manchuria, but that did little to stop Japan. Japan withdrew from the League of Nations at that time, and by 1937 began further invasions into Chinese territory. and in the early 1940s Japan occupied French Indochina (territory in Southeast Asia).
please give brainliest.
It is B, many of the caudillos governed with iron fist for instance Francisco Solano Lopez in Paraguay. Democracy took long to be achieved and places like Cuba and Venezuela are not democracies nowadays, although they enjoyed democractic periods in their existence.
The correct answer is
<span>They disagreed over the acquisition of the Philippines
The republicans didn't want the Philippines while the Democrats wanted to acquire it. Those against it believed that it would make the US into an imperialist force like those in Europe that they believed were evil, while the Democrats wanted more land and more resources, claiming that they would help the people of Philippines. </span>
The reform that the Progressives introduced to combat the problems associated with industrialised capitalism was the Sherman anti-trust acts.
The Sherman Anti-Trust Act was approved July 2, 1890. It constituted the first Federal act that outlawed monopolistic business practices. The Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 was the first measure passed by the U.S. Congress to prohibit trusts. A number of states had passed similar laws, but they were limited to intrastate businesses.