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nikdorinn [45]
3 years ago
10

Who is da best? one answer is correct

History
2 answers:
Airida [17]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

my answer is C

Explanation:

masya89 [10]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

Firestar

Explanation:

I dont know what this is but i will take the points thank you

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Which country did miners come to Oregon in search of gold
kupik [55]
I would say oregon but im not sure
8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
1.) What was unique about Nazi deportations of Jews in Denmark when compared to other countries that the Nazis conquered?
Anna35 [415]

Answer:

It is difficult to begin a chronological index, a matrix – as it were – for a massive event. In fact, Nazi Germany generated several policies of planned mass killing, a practice which culminated in the attempt to completely destroy European Jewry in a planned way, which will be the focal point of this index. The beginning of these mass killing practices has been clearly identified: the first massacres took place in the context of the total ideological war against the USSR. However, the warning signs preceding these practices, without which the latter remain mostly difficult to understand, are still being discussed (Burrin, 1989; Gerlach, 1998; Browning, 1992 and 2003; Brayard, 2004). With a few rare exceptions, the factual information about these phenomena has been well documented and analyzed, which justifies attributing four stars to all of the facts and events detailed below, except when indicated otherwise.

Should one link Hitler directly to Luther, as some U.S. authors did in the 1950s? The approach chosen here will not. The first manifestations of discrimination against Jews began in Germany during the First World War, then were eclipsed on the institutional level during the Weimar Republic; afterward, they grew steadily from 1933 to 1941. However, one cannot trace a direct line from discrimination to persecution and killing.

Thus, we must begin by focusing on Germany, even though murder practices (in the strictest sense) did not take place there at the time, in order to explain a process which blazed across the whole of Europe and led to the participation of a very broad part of European societies, and the killing of over 5 million Jews from all the countries involved (Hilberg, 1961). We shall also present a detailed account of the local implementation procedures of violent impulses, which were sometimes decided locally, but were more frequently inspired by the Berlin-based decision-making centers, through a general matrix, and four geographically-based indexes. Based on the general matrix, which will concentrate on the central (i.e., German) point of view, we shall:

show how discrimination practices were exported, radicalized and spread to the fringe of territories that were occupied early on – Austria, Czechoslovakia and Poland. Actually, these countries initially served as laboratories for Nazi Germany’s Final Solution, and then – in the case of Poland – as a vanguard in this process.

Observe how killing practices began differently, and followed specific procedures in Yugoslavia, and especially in Russia.

Describe how the Nazis implemented the decision to eradicate European Jewry, which had been taken between December 1941 and the end of January 1942, and adapted it to particular local conditions in Western Europe.

May 1916: Census of the Jews drafted into the German armed forces, officially to put an end to rumors that they were not sent to the Front as much as other troops. The census results were not publicized; this added to the rumors, which grew after 1918 (Kruse, 1997).

1918-1924: At the end of the war, Germany experienced a series of different kinds of unrest and conflict: friction in its border areas due to inter-community clashes in Silesia and in the Posen area, several coup attempts, revolutionary movements and the Spartakist crisis in Berlin, Max Hoelz’s Communist insurrection in Thuringia and Saxony (Schumann, 2001), as well as Kapp’s separatist coup in Bavaria. Germans experienced the occupation of the Rhineland and the Ruhr region by Franco-Belgian forces as the peak of the crisis, as this occupation was perceived as an invasion, coupled with an internal betrayal, due to the activitives of the Rhinelander separatists (Krumeich, Schröder (eds.), 2004). The idea of a “World of enemies” in league with one another against Germany, which had emerged during World War I, came back to the fore at this time. The imagined conjunction of the action of internal and external enemies, some of which were seen as marked by a biological difference, constitutes a mental structure born of war culture, and of its preservation as a framework of thought by völkische activists throughout this period.

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
Question 15
Sonbull [250]
The correct answer is slave ship
5 0
1 year ago
Who was most responsible for forging a compromise on a peace settlement? Georges Clemenceau of France
Aliun [14]

David Lloyd George was most responsible for forging a compromise on a peace settlement after World War I, the Treaty of Versailles.

The Treaty of Versailles was a treaty of peace that was signed in the city of Versailles at the end of the First World War by more than fifty countries.This treaty officially ended with the state of war between Germany and the Allies of the First World War. It was signed on June 28, 1919 exactly five years after the Sarajevo bombing in which the archduke Francisco Fernando was murdered, the direct cause of the war. Although the armistice was signed months before (November 11, 1918) to end hostilities on the battlefield, it took six months of negotiations at the Paris Peace Conference to conclude the peace treaty. The Treaty of Versailles came into force on January 10, 1920.

George contributed decisively to the treaty acquiring a strong anti-German tone. Of the many provisions of the treaty, one of the most important and controversial provisions stipulated that the Central Powers (Germany and its allies) would accept all moral and material responsibility for having caused the war and, under the terms of articles 231 to 248, should disarm, make important territorial concessions to the victors and pay exorbitant economic compensation to the victorious States.


3 0
3 years ago
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13. What was the United States real concern during the Korean/Vietnam wars?
posledela

Answer:

The concern of the U.S was if Korea and Vietnam became communist more countries would fall in Asia ( Domino effect and Containment)

5 0
3 years ago
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