Answer: Ultimately I think the leaders made the decision to drop the bombs because we needed to stop the Third Reich and it was either us and our allies or them. We had to make it them.
2. I would have made that decision. People were being slaughtered every day and persecuted for something that is blameless and that needed to be stopped.
Explanation: I would want to stop the carnage and if that was the only way, then yes I would have done it. But remember, this is asking YOU. What would YOU do, not us. It’s your opinion technically.
The titanic passengers treated the crew with respect of they needed help at the moment.
D. a foreign policy stance that espouses a unilateral approach to protecting the best interests of the United States.
This sort of policy agenda was part of the "neoconservative" view of a number of President George W. Bush's advisers -- especially some who had also served in the administration of his father, President George H.W. Bush. In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, there was a desire to push American values and not be shy about doing so with the use of American military might. Sometimes referred to as the "Bush Doctrine," the core ideas were that the United States could pursue this goals on its own (without need for United Nations partnerships), that preemptive strikes were allowable against countries that harbored terrorists, and that regime change for the sake of promoting democracy was a good strategy.
Answer:
Believing that God had chosen him as his messenger Muhammad began to preach what God had revealed to him. The simple and clear-cut message of Islam, that there is no God but Allah, and that life should be lived in complete submission to the will of Allah, was attractive to many people, and they flocked to hear it.
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All able Muslims must make a pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca at least once in their lifetimes.