I believe 1 and 4 are incorrect. 4 is quite ridiculous, England won the war and had no reason whatsoever to cede colonies to the Germans. 1 is debatable, but the general consensus is that the Americans joined less to fight the "enemy over there" but rather because they felt threatened by Germany's potential alliance with a powerful Mexico and because of Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare. That said, one could argue that 1, in this case, is correct.
I believe 2 and 3 are correct. The United States did join the League of Nations after the war to prevent another conflict and promote peace (that didn't work too well). The League of Nations of the past could be compared to the United Nations of today. The American troops that arrived in Europe in the year of 1918 did indeed help stem the German advance. At some points arriving at a rate of 10 000 a day, the fresh American troops pretty much were able to swarm the war-weary Germans and kill more than the Germans could replace.
Hannibal's losses in the Second Punic War effectively put an end to Carthage's empire in the western Mediterranean, leaving Rome in control of Spain and allowing Carthage to retain only its territory in North Africa. Carthage was also forced to give up its fleet and pay a large indemnity to Rome in silver.
Sorry if this doesn't work...
Daniel Shays was an American soldier, revolutionary, and farmer famous for being one of the leaders of Shays' Rebellion, a populist uprising against controversial debt collection and tax policies in Massachusetts in 1786 and 1787.
Answer:
Slavery and racism still exist, and it's even worse than before the civil war.
Explanation:
The Cartoonist illustrated a White League handshakes with Ku Klux Klan a shield that illustrates a black couple weeping over their baby.
In the background, it depicts the burning of school house and a freedman who was hanged on a tree.
"Worse than Slavery," was written boldly on the shield, and the combined text reads: "The Union as It Was: This Is a White Man's Government."
Hence, the message the cartoonist is trying to express about life after the civil war especially for African Americans is that: Slavery and racism still exist, and it's even worse than before the civil war.