World War I. It lasted from July 1914 until November 1918.
Answer:
"Thousands of Americans were killed, wounded, imprisoned, made gravely ill, or driven to death (suiside) by the war. The government finally abolished the draft, which had been a point of great controversy during most of the war (“Working Class War”), and placed limits on the president’s powers through the War Powers Act of 1973 (president must inform Congress within 48 hours of deploying troops and 90 day maximum deployment without Congressional approval). During much of the war, Americans were deeply divided (Living-Room War). Those who supported (hawks) and those who opposed (doves) the war often felt great hostility toward one another. Americans developed a more cynical attitude toward government and politicians as a result of war-related lies, deceptions, and questionable activities carried out by the Johnson and Nixon administrations (Pentagon Papers). Americans became more cautious about foreign policy decisions that might require sending US troops to intervene in other nations’ affairs."
Explanation:
(Found on Google)
Answer:
No, because this could really hurt people. If one person or group had finaal say in religious issues, it might cause a dispute between family or other people in this religion.
<span>Well, as far as this universe is concerned, it is a singularity that's "behind" a black hole, but in all truth, "Behind" really IS "inside." Gravity is a direction that points outside the universe into another dimension. Gravity is a curviature of space-time, and since we're always in space, you can't look or point in the actual direction space is being bent.
From a 3d space perspective, there's more space behind the black hole. You can come at it from any angle just as you would a planet or star. The "hole" leads down to a point in space that is infinitely compressed - infinitely dense; basically, a shrinking down to nothingness. You can't see the singularity, because it is surrounded by the event horizon - the point-of-no-return where gravity becomes so strong that even light cannot escape. This could be considered the "surface" of the black hole, but whatever is inside of it, besides saying that it's a singularity, nobody can really say for certain because it's impossible to observe with our knowledge of science. hope that helped</span>
Inset maps of north America included because they are used to show an overview of the area or a close up of a section. I hope that this is the answer that you were looking for and it has helped you.