<span>ver 116,000 U.S. citizens died in World War I, making it the third bloodiest war in U.S. history behind World War II and the U.S. Civil War. Though the reasons for the United States’ entry into World War I are many, one of the primary reasons was the Zimmerman telegram, a communique sent from Germany to Mexico, but intercepted and deciphered by British code breakers. The Zimmerman telegram threatened the U.S. territories, thus shifting public sentiment in favor of the Allied Powers of Great Britain, France and Russia.</span>
I don't know what you're referring to, and don't think it was much different than defending against a number of well-armed, trained, and disciplined troops. If anything, the German Army in WWII was a really tough bunch.
<span>Two things may show some differences, however, at least in the war in the Pacific. Japanese were far more willing to fight to the last man, rather than surrender, whereas most German units would stick the white flag up when it was clear that they had lost the engagement, and had no retreat. In "island hopping", the US also took on extremely fortified Japanese positions that were not destroyed with even massive bombing and naval fire</span>
I have a name in mind but can't think of it, can you give a list of the answer choices? Thanks.
Answer:
Economic markets will regulate themselves without government interference.
Explanation:
Smith favors free markets and the system of capitalism.
capitalism: the economic system in which free markets operate and are motivated by the investment of individuals who wish to see profits accrue from business enterprise
He trusts an "invisible hand" that causes markets to regulate themselves. Smith also supports laissez-faire economic policies. In this approach, the government does not interfere in a nation's economy.
The original purpose was to protect pilgrims from danger.