<span>d.) by creating jobs in the north</span>
World War I (1914–18): Causes Although the United States<span> did not enter World War I until 1917, the outbreak of that war in 1914, and its underlying causes and consequences, deeply and immediately affected America's position both at home and abroad. In the debate on </span>neutrality<span> and later on peace aims, much was made of European secret diplomacy, which was rejected on the U.S. side of the Atlantic, of militarism and the escalating arms race before 1914, and of the impact of colonialism. Undoubtedly, all these factors contributed to the origins of the European catastrophe, but they do not explain why the war broke out when it did. This question can only be answered more precisely by looking at the political and military decision‐making processes in the last months, weeks, and days of peace in 1914.</span>
Today, we know that the climate history over the last 10.000 years has been drastically changing. One particularly important aspect on what had happened was the fact that the glaciers and ice caps melted - a.
This has been happening over the thousands of years and has been increasingly noticeable in the last couple of decades.
<span>The congressional district plan would be far easier to implement due to the fact that it does not require a constitutional amendment. It is a long, lengthy, and difficult process to add or change amendments in the constitution so if it is avoidable to do so, it would be far simpler.</span>