In clause 7: "A widow after the death of her husband, shall ... have her ... inheritance... and she may remain in the house of her husband for forty days after her death".
Clause 8 "No widow shall be compelled to marry, so long as she prefers to live without a husband".
A. Social Security because when you start turning into a adult you have bill and things but one of then is social security.
Answer is: <span>C. Soldiers from colonies around the world fought in the war.
</span>Colonies became a source of manpower and raw materials. <span>European colonies were not passive, while there was war in Europe, they were actively involved in the fight. For example </span><span>The </span>French Foreign Legion and King's African Rifles.
It caused the rip tides like rise of Hitler or the reason Italy and Japan fell to facism and the US went ahead did their own treaties with the defeated.
You'll have to consider for yourself what your own thoughts are, but some of the issues were these:
The United States saw the use of the atomic bombs as a way to bring the war to an end in a way that would cost less American lives. A land invasion of Japan would have meant many American soldiers being killed in battle. However, the cost in Japanese lives was enormous by the use of the bombs, and that was not given equal consideration.
Another consideration was that the United States had been engaging in a fire-bombing campaign of Japanese cities prior to the use of atomic bombs. The fire-bombing campaigns were horrifically destructive also, but did not have the radiation after-effects of atomic bombings.
An option that could have been used rather than dropping atomic bombs was to enlist Soviet troops in a joint invasion of Japan. But the USA wanted to avoid postwar Soviet presence in Japan, and the atomic bombs were seen as a way of ending the war quickly. You can consider whether it would have been a more "moral" way of pursuing war to conduct a land invasion with Soviet assistance.
Finally, the escalation to the point of using atomic bombs was, in part, due to the Allies' insistence on an "unconditional surrender" by Japan. A second bomb was dropped at Nagasaki after the first was dropped on Hiroshima, because Japan did not submit to unconditional surrender in the immediate aftermath of the Hiroshima bombing. You can consider for yourself whether some other resolution besides "unconditional surrender" was a viable option for ending the war with Japan.