Answer:
The Munich Putsch did not succeed, but it was not a failure. I moderately agree with this statement because there were both failure and succes. Short term failures were:
- The Nazi party was banned, and Hitler was prevented from speaking in public until 1927.
- Hitler was tried for high treason (betraying his country) and sentenced to five years in prison.
Long term success:
- He was sentenced in April and out of prison by December. During his time in the comfortable Landsberg Prison, he wrote 'Mein Kampf' – a propaganda book setting out Nazi beliefs. Millions of Germans read it, and Hitler's ideas became very well-known.
- The fact that the judge had been so lenient with the sentence and that Hitler had served so little time suggests that some people in authority had sympathy with Hitler and what he had tried to do.
- Hitler realised that he would never come to power by revolution and that he would have use democratic means, so he reorganised the party to enable it to take part in elections.
Answer:General George S. Patton "The French are a smallish, monkey-looking bunch and not dressed any better, ... This is a true story: I was up at a collage campus and this girl from France is working at the desk
Explanation:General George S. Patton "The French are a smallish, monkey-looking bunch and not dressed any better, ... This is a true story: I was up at a collage campus and this girl from France is working at the desk
Discover the capacity of reinvent self.
Answer:
Therevada
Explanation:
It is the most commonly accepted/known form of Buddhism.
Officially on the third of October, 1990, East Germany reunited with West Germany. There was a significant amount of apprehension from the perspective of social welfare. The East was known to have a lower standard of living, including less access to goods, products, services and a balanced diet. In addition, education and work opportunities were lower prior to the time of reunification. The industrialized West, had concerns over the ability of the East to quickly improve and reform much of the basic infrastructure in order to get in line with the West's standards.
Over time, the East greatly improved and adopted the same standards for living, including improved roadways, education, products and services. The standards are on par with much of the rest of the country now. In addition, the system effectively integrated much of what was once thought to be only a drain on the West's financial and industrial systems. And of course, Berlin has resumed being the capital. In fact, much of what is done and said in Germany today, is considered the guiding parameters for continued growth and development in the Eurozone block. The European Union relies on Germany's status as an economic power house, clearly demonstrating some of the positive effects that have resulted from reunification.