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goldenfox [79]
3 years ago
8

What did the Selective Service Act mean for American men?

History
1 answer:
Anon25 [30]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

The Selective Service Act of 1917 or Selective Draft Act authorized the United States federal government to raise a national army for service in World War I through conscription. It was envisioned in December 1916 and brought to President Woodrow Wilson's attention shortly after the break in relations with Germany in February 1917. The Act itself was drafted by then-Captain Hugh S. Johnson after the United States entered World War I by declaring war on Germany. The Act was canceled with the end of the war on November 11, 1918. The Act was upheld as constitutional by the United States Supreme Court in 1918.

Explanation:

and the answer is d brainliest plsss

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How did the Magna Carta and the English bill of rights influence the colonists view of government
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Magna Carta exercised a strong influence both on the United States Constitution and on the constitutions of the various states. ... Magna Carta was widely held to be the people's reassertion of rights against an oppressive ruler, a legacy that captured American distrust of concentrated political power.

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Giving brainiest!!! Who was the first president in the United States?
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What is one of the provisions that the US national government is obligated to do for the states, according to the constitution
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What are two reasons why Communism was seen as such a threat to America in the 1950s?
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World War II eliminated one type of totalitarianism only by strengthening another, with Soviet communism gaining territory and momentum.  The U.S. and Soviet Union were the two powers left standing at the end of WWII, but their longstanding rivalry never degenerated into a direct armed conflict between the two nations.  Thus, their rivalry was called the Cold War as opposed to an actual hot war, though smaller conflicts spun out of it.  What lent the Cold War such urgency was that if it had turned into a hot war, it would’ve been the hottest war in history because each side stockpiled big arsenals of nuclear weapons.

Joseph Stalin, ca. 1937

Joseph Stalin, ca. 1937

Starved Peasants on the Street in Kharkiv, Ukraine, 1933

Starved Peasants on the Street in Kharkiv, Ukraine, 1933

Complicating matters, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin was a sociopath of near Hitlerian proportions.  As General Secretary of the Communist Party, his ruthless disregard for human life made him the idol of future Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.  The son of Georgian peasants, Comrade Stalin worked his way up the Bolshevik ranks as a bank robber in the czarist era.  In power from 1922-53, he was probably as murderous as Hitler, killing at least 10 million Soviets through deliberate, if famine-related, starvation, including the Ukrainian Holodomor (left), Great Terror political purges, and imprisonment in Gulag labor camps.  Holodomor translates to “extermination by hunger.”  Some historians, including Robert Conquest in The Great Terror (1968), estimate the number as high as 20 million while others, including Soviet dissident Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Soviet historian/political reformer Alexander Yakovlev, put the number far higher yet, at 60-70 million.  If we’re keeping score, Hitler’s total should include more than just the Holocaust since he was largely responsible for the entire European theater of WWII that killed tens of millions more, including civilians in Stalin’s USSR.

For sheer callousness at least, Stalin could rival anyone.  He sealed off borders and liquidated prosperous peasants (kulaks) by starving them to death to redirect their money toward industry.  He famously said that “one death is a tragedy; a million deaths is a statistic.”  Like Hitler, his genocidal policies were often aimed at nationalities such as Ukrainians or nomads of Kazakhstan.  Nonetheless, most historians would argue that, given the choice, Soviets and Eastern Europeans were lucky that the USSR prevailed over Germany in World War II.  Remember, Hitler’s unrealized Generalplan Ost would’ve enslaved, expelled or exterminated most of the Slavic population.  Under Stalin, citizens were usually allowed to live as long as they submitted to state authority and many prisoners survived the Gulags.  Luckily, Stalin never fully provoked the West to the point of escalation and didn’t live to see the advent of nuclear missiles with hydrogen-bomb warheads.

Explanation:

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