<h2><u>Answer:</u></h2>
The war started with Nazi Germany's assault on Poland in September 1939, the United States did not enter the war until after the Japanese shelled the American armada in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December 7, 1941.
Among the war's significant defining moments for the United States were the Battle of Midway (1942), the intrusion of Italy (1943), the Allied attack of France (1944), the clash of Leyte Gulf (1944) and the dropping of the nuclear bombs on Japan (1945). The war finished with the Axis forces' genuine surrender in 1945.
Absolutely, without a single doubt in my mind, I would change the electoral college system; by completely eradicating it. I'm 18 years old, and I've lived through three elections in my short lifetime. Three elections in which a presidential candidate has won the popular vote; the vote of the people by he will of the people. Two elections in which a presidential candidate has lost the popular vote, and been elected president. The electoral college can oppose the will of the people and elect a president by its own will, which is unethical. Especially unethical in a country that puts such an enormous spoken value on the freedom to vote and create change. When in the reality of the United States the freedom to vote is merely the freedom to go to a ballot box and express an opinion that MAY or MAY NOT make a difference in the vote of the electoral college voters
What qualifies someone to become a citizen of the United States is if they have had a green card for 5 years; be able to read/write in English; go through a naturalization process.
An example that I would give of a situation in which a real-life problem has to be solved or a decision has to be made using good judgement would be the case of deciding what to study in university:
<em>"When I had to decide what I was going to study, I immediately put journalism out of my mind, as I believed it did not suit my personality. Even though I loved writing, I had always imagined that journalists had to be aggressive, </em><em>overconfident</em><em> and pushy, and that news only happened in other, more interesting places. I could not see how that could fit me. The school counselor I talked to kept telling me that this was not the case, but my </em><em>belief perseverance</em><em> would not let me listen to other information. In the end I decided to go for accounting. I believed that accounting was only about boring numbers, and for the first few months, I was responsible of </em><em>confirmation bias</em><em>, as that was the only thing I noticed about my studies. However, over time, I grew to like the path I had chosen, and I do not regret it."</em>
It has to be at least 10 feet away from heat sources.