Banned worked from important industries from striking as then products for the war could not be made.
Their was a new law made about labor. I'm not sure tho
Answer:
d. Churchill and Stalin became allies.
Explanation:
- 4/23/1941 Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain Winston Churchill sends a letter to the Prime Minister of the USSR, Joseph Stalin, informing him that the German Government is preparing an attack on the USSR.
- July 18, 1941 USSR Prime Minister Joseph Stalin sent a letter to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Winston Churchill: demanded that the United Kingdom open a second front in the west (in northern France) and in northern Europe (in the Arctic).
- 7/20/1941 Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain Winston Churchill replies to the Prime Minister of the USSR, Joseph Stalin, that the Germans have 40 divisions in France and that the British have no opportunity to open another front in either France or the Arctic.
- September 15, 1941 USSR Prime Minister Joseph Stalin sent a letter to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain, Winston Churchill, requesting that the United Kingdom open a second front in the West or send twenty-five to thirty divisions via the Archangel or Iran .
- October 25, 1941 US Prime Minister Winston Churchill, through the British Ambassador to Moscow, informs USSR Prime Minister Joseph Stalin that the UK has no possibility of sending 25-30 Divisions through the USSR Archangel or Iran.
- August 12, 1942 Multi-day talks (Moscow Conference) begin between the Prime Minister of the USSR, Joseph Stalin, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Averell Harriman, US Presidential Envoy discussing general plans for future federal operations.
Answer:
The government could take away freedoms
Answer:
The New York Restraining Act 1767.
The Revenue Act 1767.
The Indemnity Act 1767.
The Commissioners of Customs Act 1767.
The Vice Admiralty Court Act 1768.
Raising revenue.
American Board of Customs Commissioners.
Boycotts.
These are some examples