The correct answer that would best complete the given statement above would be BOTTOM THIRD. <span>Historically, texans rank in the bottom third in terms of national voter participation. Texas has always low voter turnout and this record broke during the 2008 elections. Hope this answer helps. </span>
USA intervened in Korea and Vietnam as war efforts and in Greece and Turkey as coups.
Explanation:
In Turkey the US government aided a coup by the military to overthrow the government which in turn led to a regressive government to be placed in there.
A similar thing happened in Greece when a socialist party was elected into the Country with affiliations or alleged ones with the Soviet Union.
Korea was invaded by the USA in support of the south during the Korean war so as to stop the communist North from taking over all of the Korea under the influence of USSR.
Similar thing happened in Vietnam but it was not successful and Vietnam did fall to the communist army after US departure.
The Cold War and it was a it was a nuclear missile war.
From my point of view it is not so effective since it is like living in a neighborhood and not talking to the neighbors. You can live like that but it would be hard. Countries need other countries in today's interconnected world. In the past it proved to be a bad approach. For example, Roosvelt refused to declare war against Germany and was obliged to declare war to Japan after the susprise attack to Pearl Harbor in 1941.
The idea that modern science took place as a kind a revolution has been debated among historians. A weakness of the idea of scientific revolution is the lack of a systematic approach to the question of knowledge in the period comprehended between the 14th and 17th centuries, leading to misunderstandings on the value and role of modern authors. From this standpoint, the continuity thesis is the hypothesis that there was no radical discontinuity between the intellectual development of the Middle Ages and the developments in the Renaissance and early modern period and has been deeply and widely documented by the works of scholars like Pierre Duhem, John Hermann Randall, Alistair Crombie and William A. Wallace, who proved the preexistence of a wide range of ideas used by the followers of the scientific revolution thesis to substantiate their claims.