The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Unfortunately, you forgot to include teh quote. Without the quote, we do not know its content. Just you.
You do not provide any context, excerpt, article, or references.
The only thing we can do to help you is to comment on the following.
Although you forgot to attach the quote, we are going to assume that you refer to a piece of advertisement found in newspapers in the times of the California Golden Rush. If that is teh case, then the impact I think these advertisements had on people living in the East was that it made people from the East Coast of the United States decide to move to the Pacific West, California, in specific, to go there and try to get rich.
Let's have in mind that in the 1840s, the territory of California was a faraway place from the East Coast. When John Marshall discovered gold in Sutter's Mill, California, the news spread fast and many people wanted to get rich. The so-called "gold fever" had begun. This represented the beginning of the vast migration identified as the California gold rush migration. Historians believe that approximately 250,000 or more arrived in California in search of the "gold dream."
The main goal of the Sherman Antitrust Act was to "<span>(C) create greater fairness in industry," since it sought to break up the various monopolies and trusts that were forming between businesses and hurting competition in the US economy. </span>
Answer: first computer and antibiotics/ vaccines
Explanation:
these are major in <em>my opinion</em>
But I HOPE this helps
Answer: No
Explanation:
The world was simply not ready for another nuclear strike at the time and especially not against a country like China. China had just become a communist country and had the support of the Soviet Union. Any nuclear attacks on China might have led to all out war with the Chinese and the Soviets which would have definitely involved nuclear weapons.
Also worthy of note was that the Chinese had practiced restraint in the Korean war. They did not use heavy machinery and were content to limit their attacks on the UN forces after some time which showed that they too did not want to escalate the conflict. A diplomatic solution was therefore the best option and what I would have sought, much like Truman did.
In the president Lincolns speech at the dedication of the military cemetery at Gellysburg he stated that the outcome of the war would be a "new birth of freedom. He addressed about a new nation on this continent conceived in a liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.