<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, the best option is "exercise" since it can clear the mind. </span>
<span>William Marbury supported the Judiciary Act of 1789 because it allowed Marbury to take his case to the Supreme Court.
Hope it helps :D
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<span>a. European industries struggled. - no, this was not the effect, but a reason for it.
b. Trade expanded between a number of nations. - yes, it did. It strengthened the industries in the countries, which lead to a better trade.
c. Unemployment rates increased across the board - no, rather decreased
d. The Soviet Union eventually took part in the plan.
-no, they never did. </span>
Answer: Yes they did WW1 killed so many so the US did not want to get in a another thing like that
Because the Industrial Revolution increased the production capacity of Western states astronomically, there was an enormous hunger for raw materials to satisfy demands. Thus, Western powers sought colonies where raw materials were abundant and where they could be appropriated at little to no cost. Additionally, colonies gave the Western powers a ready-made market for their goods, as the colonized people were left with little to no legal recourse to produce their own finished products. Technological advances in Western arms and transportation commonly made indigenous resistance to imperial incursions futile and short-lived, as Westerners had far superior weapons, ammunition, strategy and tactics.
Additionally, technological advances made former threats to European settlement and survival in equatorial zones less daunting. For example, the development of the steamship eradicated the danger posed by the mouths of many African rivers. The steamship could simply be dissembled, brought inland and then reassembled for river travel, while wooden sailing ships previously could not. Similarly, industrial age advances in medicine brought quinine, a supplement that exponentially increased the survival rate of Western imperialists in malarial areas, acting as a preventative, though not a cure. Thus, Westerners could now worry much less about disease, whereas before quinine, severe fever and even death often came within weeks after arrival.