Thomas Edison was a Nineteenth-century inventor who is associated with Menlo Park in New Jersey
I think the The answer is C because I learned about him and Slavery together
The Gulf of Tonkin incident occurred in the Gulf of Tonkin off of the coast of North Vietnam.
The citizens were told the North Vietnamese communists violently attacked a US ship which was peacefully existing to aid South Vietnam. It was presented as a direct threat to the US and a means for war.
The ship was in North Vietnamese territory and was alone away from the rest of the US fleet in South Vietnam. The US was not peaceful as they were attacking the North and supplying the South putting them directly in the war.
Per the Constitution--war is to be asked for by the executive and approved by Congress with an official declaration of war. However, the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution gave permission to Johnson to use war materials and practices without an official declaration of war. This prevented allies from entering the war but allowed the US to engage in war behavior under the executive orders.
Answer:
Short Term *secure International support for the Allies
*bring the war to an end
Long Term
*remove economic barriers to free trade
*abolish the use of secret treaties among nations
Explanation:
The address delivered by President Woodrow Wilson on January 8, 1918 is known as <em>Fourteen Points Speech</em>. During the speech he talked about about peace in Europe and Americas. He urged the Allies to set <em>unselfish peace terms with the central powers in the matters of freedom of seas, right to national self defence, restoration of territories conquered during the wa</em>r.
He talked bout <em>fourteen strategies </em>to ensure world peace and national security. It set the tone for US foreign policy and postwar American diplomacy. He foresaw that isolationist policy will not be helpful and international relations would become more important to global commerce and American security. So he advocated about<em> arms reduction, equal trade conditions and national sovereignty for the former colonies.</em>