Due to their advanced code-breaking abilities, the United States was able to predict what the Japanese's attack strategy on Pearl Harbor. The U.S. strategically moved their aircraft carriers to avoid the attack and were able to advance on the Japanese Navy.
The aircraft carriers then became the focus of Japan's military strategy. They were upset that their plans were interrupted and didn't work the first time, so they gave it another try. The Japanese fleet commander, Admiral Yamamoto, chose Midway since it was close to Pearl Harbor. His goal was to destroy the American aircraft carriers. He hoped that this tactic would move them away from the rest of the U.S. forces and be the best place to eliminate the carriers.
It would prove to be extremely ineffective. When the United States decided not to join the league, it was primarily made up of weak countries so it didn't have any muscle to enforce anything. This was proven when Japan inbaded Manchuria despite the league trekking then not to. This showed Hitler that without the united States in the league of Nations, there would be nobody to step in and stop Germany from invading Poland in 1939
The civil war due to these tax disagreements the civil war started
Women in the workplace, especially in Garment factories, were historically mistreated. The union is meant to improve the conditions of working women in factories as well as increase awareness of the issue.
Polytheism (from Greek πολυθεϊσμός, polytheismos) is the worship of or belief in multiple deities, which are usually assembled into a pantheon of gods and goddesses, along with their own religions and rituals. In most religions which accept polytheism, the different gods and goddesses are representations of forces of nature or ancestral principles, and can be viewed either as autonomous or as aspects or emanations of a creator deity or transcendental absolute principle (monistic theologies), which manifests immanently in nature (panentheistic and pantheistic theologies).[1] Most of the polytheistic deities of ancient religions, with the notable exceptions of the Ancient Egyptian[2] and Hindu deities, were conceived as having physical bodies.
Polytheism is a type of theism. Within theism, it contrasts with monotheism, the belief in a singular God, in most cases transcendent. Polytheists do not always worship all the gods equally, but they can be henotheists, specializing in the worship of one particular deity. Other polytheists can be kathenotheists, worshiping different deities at different times.
Polytheism was the typical form of religion during the Bronze Age and Iron Age up to the Axial Age and the development of Abrahamic religions, the latter of which enforced strict monotheism. It is well documented in historical religions of Classical antiquity, especially ancient Greek religion and ancient Roman religion, and after the decline of Greco-Roman polytheism in tribal religions such as Germanic paganism or Slavic paganism.
Important polytheistic religions practiced today include Chinese traditional religion, Hinduism, Japanese Shinto, Santeria, and various neopagan faiths.