Answer: The program involved the United States in the war by sending munitions and armaments.
The Lend-Lease policy was an American program that was designed to help the Allies win the war. It consisted of sending food, oil and military material to the United Kingdom, China, the Soviet Union, France and other Allied countries between 1941 and 1945. The program represented a departure from the policy of neutrality and non-interventionism that had dominated American politics since 1931.
Answer:
C. a concern about the Vietnam War
Explanation:
In the late 1960s, the members of the counterculture share with many other American citizens the "concern about the Vietnam War."
The Vietnam war which lasted for about 20 years, beginning in 1955 and ended in 1975, saw the northern Vietnamese go against the South Vietnamese.
Then, with the American involvement lasting more than they had envisaged after committing themselves to take a side in the war, the counterculture movements and American society in general, joined together to express their desire to end the Vietnam War.
In the 1930s, many people began thinking Marx was right and that Communism was the wave of the future because the New York Stock Exchange crashed in 1929, fulfilling Marx's prediction of business booms and crashes.
Answer:
Many of the major Founding Fathers owned numerous slaves, such as George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison. Others owned only a few slaves, such as Benjamin Franklin. And still, others married into large slave-owning families, such as Alexander Hamilton.
Explanation: