The USA and the USSR were at odds over how Europe would be governed after the war. The USA (and its democratic partners among the Allies) wanted free and open elections in the countries of Eastern Europe coming out from under Nazi domination. The Soviet Union wanted states allied and aligned with it to prevent any future aggression against the USSR (like how Germany had invaded). The USSR ended up heavily influencing the Eastern European countries to align with communism, bringing them behind what British prime minister Winston Churchill called "The Iron Curtain."
The situation of Germany itself was also a tension spot. Germany was divided between the four Allied nations (Britain, France, the USA, and the USSR). The British, French and American sectors combined their governance of West Germany and West Berlin. The Americans and their partners sought to preserve democratic freedoms in the area or Germany under their control. The Soviets blockaded Berlin (located within the Soviet sector of East Germany). The American side responded with the Berlin Airlift to keep West Berlin free of Soviet control.
Spain's settlement in the Americas, much like the settlement of the English and the French, led to a mass extermination of the native population in many regions.
i feel my eyes are playing tricks on me again, every time i look i see it...them. with the deep cuts on my skin and my missing teeth around me i try to find my flash light which had flung when i tripped. not being able to find it i get up and run as fast as i can away from them... the hunters. the challenge just started yesterday and already im about to loose, i already lost my team, 1 shot by a hunter with the blood oozing out of her head and the other... never mind.
so no real answer here i just started writing lol
Answer:
Propaganda during the Reformation, helped by the spread of the printing press throughout Europe and in particular within Germany, caused new ideas, thoughts, and doctrine to be made available to the public in ways that had never been seen before the sixteenth century.