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Below are the choices:
He was undecided because of the divided public opinion.
<span>He wanted to keep the United States out of war under any circumstances. </span>
<span>He hoped to avoid war but expected that the United States would be drawn in. </span>
<span>He asked the American people to support him in going to war.
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Answer is <span>He hoped to avoid war but expected that the United States would be drawn in. </span>
The architectural structures built were pyramids, palaces, walls, residences, and more. I’m sure someone else could tell you the second part of the question sorry.
The right question is C. World War II.
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born on 2 October 1869 in British India and died on 30 January 1948 at the age of 78. His political and spiritual leadership started early in his life, with the age of 23, in 1893 he moved to South Africa and spent 21 years in that country. He participated at the South African Civil right activism until 1914. He returned to India in 1915 and until 1947 he struggled for Indian independence from the United Kingdom. During this period, 1938-1945, World War II exploded with all its destruction and mass murderers.
In 1921 Adolf Hitler became leader of the Nazi party. The Nazis were racists and believed that their Aryan race was superior to others.
To them, an Aryan was anyone who was European and not Jewish, Romany or Slavic.
They also thought Germany was a more important country than its neighbours.
Laws against the Jews
In 1934 Hitler became Germany's head of state. He introduced anti-Semitic laws which discriminated against Jewish people living in the areas he controlled.
Some of these laws meant that Jewish children could no longer go to school, keep pets or have a bicycle.
The Nazis believed that Jews were a problem that needed to be removed. The mass killings of the Holocaust were what Hitler called "The Final Solution".
Hitler also wanted to make Germany bigger, so he invaded neighbouring countries and took them over.
Many of the non-German people living on land that he wanted for Germans were also sent to concentration camps.
Today we call this ethnic cleansing.
The Nazis and their collaborators were able to do these things partly because not enough people stood up to them.