The best answer for this statement would be:
Police Force
<span>The character and training of the police force that we know today, derived from a municipal police officers that after the civil war, had incorporated their character and training to the police force til’ the present.</span>
THE answer is C your welcome
Answer:
There sure is.
Explanation:
As Eric Hobsbawm righteous explains in <em>The Age of Extremes </em>neither the Marxist historians nor the Revionist ones are right. To start with: when Truman left the white house in 1953 the cold war hadn´t started properly. And Stalin died in the same year. Nevertheless they did partly shape the hostile environment (Truman doctrine) of the two superpowers after the war.
Anyway, Hobsbawm quite convincingly argues that it was exaggerated American fear of Russian agression that lead ultimately to the cold war. The initially Russian ideal of spreading communism over the globe was not seen as realistic any more by the Sovjet leaders, even before the second world war. And after it the Sovjet union was weaker than ever before. And Stalin knew it. So yes, in a sense individual personalities (Americans) are to blaim. But not mentioning Kennedy in this list is ignoring the fact that the main actors, like Kennedy, ¨<em>tapped their way though a dense cloud of incomprehension, confusion and paranoia.¨</em>
Eric Hobsbawm
Hey, you didn't put the map here but as an economist I would say the right answer is the first.
A command economy is an economy where production is planned centrally. In this way, products are produced as needed, without excess or scarcity. This model is idealized for communist countries, such as North Korea. That is, it is a state-controlled production model.
Already in a market economy, firms produce according to their estimates of profit and in constant competition by prices. In this case, the role of the state is minimal, acting only to maintain the proper environment for the transactions.
In this context, in the view of opponents of the free market, there would be a clash between commanded and free-market economies.
The Congress reduced the Supreme Court, eliminating each seat that became vacant to prevent Johnson from appointing any justices.