The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached we can say the following.
The connection between Germany's defeat in World War I and the rise of anti-Semitism in Germany in the 1930s can be found in the rise to power of Nazi leader Adolph Hitler in 1933.
The Weimar Republic had failed and the German people were desperate because they had no money and the democracy the Republic had tried to establish, did not work out well. Germany did not have enough money to pay for teh World War I reparations as agreed in the Treaty of Paris, and there was so much discontent.
Everything was set to the arrival of Adolph Hitler who had extreme and supremacist ideas since he had written his book titled "My Struggle" a classic book of National Socialists ideas in which is included anti-Semitism ideas.
Declaration of Independence was announced on July 4, 1776 during the war between thirteen American colonies and Great Britain. The colonies declared that they are independent states and formed the United States of America. One of the main authors of the declaration was Thomas Jefferson.
Missouri, and Maine both requested to become states, both wanted to be free, but Missouri ended up being slave, causing a battle known as the "burnt district" which was due to Jayhawkers of Kansas flooding into Missouri to vote pro-slave, making the polls artificially swell in support of slavery.
Spain. The Spanish civil war happened in the 1930s.