Answer:
People in the groups undertaken in Mexico agreed that a dignified standard of living should include food, clothing, housing, public services, transport, access to healthcare, access to education, and leisure time, as well as employment opportunities.Mexico's overall poverty rate is 45.5%, but nearly three-fourths of Mexicans lack at least one of eight basic needs as identified by COEVAL, a Mexican social policy organization. A 2012 survey showed that 41.8 million Mexicans live on less than $177 a month and 11.5 million live on less than $85 a month.A retiree in Mexico City should be able to live very comfortably for under $1,000. This budget includes $310 for a nice one-bedroom apartment outside the city center; $200 for groceries; $100 for utilities, Internet, and cell phone service; $100 for personal expenses; and $30 for public transportation.
Explanation:
In 1871 two new major states of Europe had been formed—the German Empire and the kingdom of Italy. The new German Empire, under the hand of Otto von Bismarck, was steered carefully, always with an eye upon France, for the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71) had left France thirsting for revenge and for recovery of the lost provinces of Alsace and Lorraine.
Germany had allied itself with Russia and Austria-Hungary in the Three Emperors' League, but Austria-Hungary and Russia were not the best of friends, partly because they were at odds over the Balkans and partly because Russia represented the Pan-Slavic movement, whose program threatened the very existence of Austria-Hungary. The Treaty of San Stefano (1878), following the Russo-Turkish War, furthered the cause of Pan-Slavism through the creation of a large Bulgarian state and offended Austria-Hungary as well as Great Britain. A European conference (1878; see Berlin, Congress of), called to revise the treaty, caused a sharp decline in the friendship between Russia on the one hand and Austria-Hungary and Germany on the other; Bismarck formed (1879) a secret defensive alliance—the Dual Alliance—with Austria-Hungary.
Answer:
Albert Einstein once said you you can not prevent and simultaneously fight war
Answer:
A because none of the other options are correct