Answer: Consideration of American responses to Nazism during the 1930s and 1940s raises questions about the responsibility to intervene in response to persecution or genocide in another country. As soon as Hitler assumed power in 1933, Americans had access to information about Nazi Germany’s persecution of Jews and other groups. Although some Americans protested Nazism, there was no sustained, nationwide effort in the United States to oppose the Nazi treatment of Jews. Even after the US entered World War II, the government did not make the rescue of Jews a major war aim. (I think this is it i dont know im pretty sure)
D because nationalism has bastion
<span>The social criticism in Upton Sinclair's The Jungle was a response to the working conditions faced by immigrants.
Immigrants often have a difficult time getting accustomed to their new country and its culture, and the jobs are no different. Usually, the conditions they have to work under are quite difficult, which Sinclair is trying to convey in his work.
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Well most of the concepts in these documents were prevalent in previous society's. Representative democracy in Athens. Basic inalienable rights was in the English Bill of Rights. But a big change was the checks and balances of government. i.e how the president can veto congress, the Supreme Court can overturn a veto, and Congress can impeach Supreme Court judges.
<span>the results of other trials for the same crime
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<span>the treatment of similar crimes in the past
Common laws evolve over time and are evident today in the form of judicial precedents whereby the decision of a high national court is legally binding on other lower courts.
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