The correct answer is B) encouraging the United States to avoid political entanglements in Europe.
Unfortunately, you forgot to include the excerpt, Without it, we had to do some deep research to find information about it.
We found that the excerpt is referring to the famous "Quarantine Speech" delivered by United States President, Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The ideas expressed in the excerpt differed from the prevailing United States approach to foreign policy issues primarily in that Roosevelt was encouraging the United States to avoid political entanglements in Europe.
We are talking about the conflictive and turmoil years previous the beginning of World War II. The situation in Europe was complicated and tensions grew as Adolph Hitler and the Nazi party increased the tome of its foreign policy and aspirations.
On October 5, 1937, United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered the Quarantine Speech in the city of Chicago, Illinois. He had decided to maintain the foreign policy of neutrality before the tensions in Europe.
In the speech, he talked about some lawless nations that did not want to maintain peace in the region. He never mentioned any names but it was obvious he was talking about Germany, Italy, and Japan.
Answer:The answer is A.
Explanation: I hope i helped
<span>Example is America. <span>It was on the 6th of August 1945 when the United States dropped ‘Little
Boy’, an atomic bomb, to Hiroshima and ‘Fat Man’ on Nagasaki on August 9
killing an estimation of 200,000 people. Because of this, Japan finally
surrendered at USS Missouri’s deck in Tokyo Bay on the 2nd day of September
1945. The representatives present were people from the Empire of Japan, the
Republic of China, Provisional Government of the French Republic, the
Commonwealth of Australia, the United Kingdom of Great Britain, United States
of America and Northern Ireland, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the
Dominion of Canada, the the Kingdom of the Netherlands, and the Dominion of New
Zealand.</span></span>
Answer:
Slaves in the city had voting rights.